2023

George Washington 1796 Sheperd’s Town Autograph Letter Signed

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:150,000.00 - 200,000.00 USD
George Washington 1796 Sheperd’s Town Autograph Letter Signed

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Auction Date:2016 Sep 26 @ 13:00 (UTC-05:00 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
ALS as president signed “Go: Washington,” one page both sides, 7.25 x 8.75, October 12, 1796. In response to praise and concerns from his historic Farewell Address, President George Washington expresses confidence that his fellow Americans will always choose a fitting and able Chief Executive to lead the country. Letter to “the Inhabitants of Shepards Town and its vicinity.” In full: “With great sensibility I receive your polite and affectionate address of the 6th instant. That Beneficial Providence which, hitherto, has preserved us in Peace, & increased our prosperity, will not, I trust, withdraw its protecting hand, while we, on our part, endeavor to merit a continuance of its favors. Equally persuaded am I, that no inconvenience will result from my retreat to the walks of private life. The good sense of my Countrymen will always discern and can never be at a loss to choose, a fit character to administer the Executive Government of these United States. If it has been my good fortune through the course of my Civil and Military employments, to have met the approbation of my Countrymen, my wishes will be consummated; and I shall have found the only reward I ever had in view. For the favorable sentiments you have expressed for me, and for your kind wishes, I sincerely thank you; and reciprocate with great cordiality my vows for your welfare.” Washington also notes “United States” as the location of this letter. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light staining and foxing, professional reinforcement to folds, expert repairs to small areas of paper loss, and minor restoration to portions of four words.


An extraordinarily rare and moving expression of Washington’s trust and affection for the American people in this handwritten letter as Washington prepares to leave the Presidency and “retreat to the walks of private life.” Washington had only recently announced to his fellow citizens in his famous Farewell Address that was first printed on Sept. 19,1796 by the American Daily Advertiser(Philadelphia) that he would not seek a third term as President, although the country overwhelmingly wanted him to do so. This was expressed to him in a letter from the people of Shepherds Town, Virginia (now West Virginia) on Oct 6, 1796 that Washington in this letter responds to. He thanks the people for their “polite and affectionate address "of 6 October expressing their “grateful sense” of Washington’s “faithful and important services, both in the cabinet and in the field, which in the course of a long life, he has rendered to the country.” They also expressed some anxiety about Washington’s successor or of anyone replacing the first President. “A less skillful pilot,” they told him, ”may, perhaps, be equal to the task of navigating in less troubled waters.” This prospect filled them “with trembling anxiety.” Washington eloquently assures them there is no cause for fear.” That Beneficial providence which hitherto has preserved us in Peace & increased our prosperity, will not, I trust, withdraw its protecting hand while we, on our part, endeavor to merit a continuance of its favors. Equally persuaded am I, that no inconvenience will result from my retreat to the walks of private life. The good sense of my Countrymen will always discern and can never be at a loss to choose a fit character to administer the Executive Government of these United States. If it has been my good fortune through the course of my Civil and Military employments, to have met the approbation of my Countrymen, my wishes will be consummated; and I shall have found the only reward I ever had in view.” He closes by thanking them "for the favorable sentiments you have expressed for me, and for your kind wishes,” and he “reciprocate[s] with great cordiality my vows for your welfare.”

Washington delivered his famous Farewell Address in September 1796 in which he expressed his thoughts on such subjects as the inseparable union of states and a plea for true neutrality for the nation. It has become one of the cornerstones of American political prose. Of the effect his Farewell Address had on the American public, biographer Thomas Flexner wrote, "The Constitutional Convention had been unwilling to put any limit on how long the President might serve. Washington’s decision to retire at the end of his second term was so climatic an act that the precedent he thus established was not violated for more than a century and then restored by a Constitutional Amendment…He had gone against the precedents of history, which made his act the more remarkable, the more endearing.”

This letter was Washington’s first written acknowledgment of the response to his farewell address so it is proper to think of this letter as a continuation of this farewell dialogue with the American people. Fittingly and tellingly, Washington dates this letter not from some locale such as Philadelphia or Mt. Vernon, but from the “United States.” In that sense he was speaking both to, and for, the people of the United States. He reaffirms his confidence in the fundamental characteristic of American democracy; that the people can be trusted to choose their own leaders.

Washington letters and manuscripts relating to his farewell from public life are extremely rare. Only 2 have sold at auction in the past 40 years. A recent comparable letter (albeit relating to his pre-presidential 1783 retirement from military service) is the Dec. 10, 1783, ALS to James McHenry, expressing his eagerness to be “translated into a private citizen.” Doyle, Nov. 5, 2012, Lot 1129, $362,500. This Washington letter is also the only known that has "United States” as the origination. One of the finest George Washington letters. Published in Fitzpatrick 35: 242.