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James A. Garfield Archive with (22) Items Signed as President

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:200,000.00 - 400,000.00 USD
James A. Garfield Archive with (22) Items Signed as President

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Auction Date:2021 May 12 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:15th Floor WeWork, Boston, Massachusetts, 02108, 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
Significant archive pertaining to the life and presidency of James A. Garfield, consisting of 47 historical items that include documents, letters, photographs, and political ephemera, nearly half of which were signed by Garfield during his brief half-year window as American president. While waiting for a train at the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station on the morning of July 2, 1881, Garfield was shot in the back and arm by unhinged office-seeker Charles Guiteau. The wounded Garfield lay sick for two months, and the injury proved fatal in September. As he was in office for a mere six months—and incapacitated for two of them—anything signed by Garfield during his presidency is very scarce and highly sought after. Of the collection’s 22 items signed by President Garfield, these include (7) letters/notes, (7) documents, (6) signatures, one endorsement, and one photograph. Also of consequence is the date of four of these items, which fall within a week of Guiteau’s attack on the president.

The archive is as follows:

1. ALS as president, signed with his initials, “JAG,” one page, 5.5 x 9, Executive Mansion letterhead, June 30, 1881. Addressed to Charles W. Clark, the letter reads: “The Marshall for Mississippi has resigned. Will you accept the place. It is doubtful if the other matter can be adjusted before the end of the year.” In fine condition. Given that Garfield was shot by Guiteau three days later at a Washington, D.C. train station, this is ostensibly the last letter he signed as president.

2. Autograph endorsement signed as president, “J. A. Garfield,” penned on the reverse of a letter from Pennsylvania Congressman Alfred C. Harmer, two pages on two adjoining sheets, 7.75 x 9.75. Garfield’s endorsement, dated June 30, 1881, in part: “Respectfully referred to the Appraiser for such consideration.” In very good to fine condition, with overall soiling, and scattered small old tape stains. Like the above letter, this document was signed just three days before his assassination.

3. LS as president, signed “J. A. Garfield,” one page, 7.75 x 10, Executive Mansion letterhead, April 30, 1881. Letter addressed to noted writer and public speaker George William Curtis, in part: “Owing to the great pressure upon my time for the last two months I have found it impossible to respond sooner to your favor…Please accept for yourself and convey to the [Civil Service Reform Association] my cordial thanks for, and high appreciation of their approval of my course in the matter of the appointment of the Postmaster for New York.” In fine condition, with staining along the left edge from an old mounting remnant on the back of the blank adjoining sheet.

4. DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page both sides, 10.5 x 14, May 27, 1881. An official letter of state addressed to “His Excellency, The Chief Executive of the Government of Peru,” signed nicely at the conclusion by Garfield, and countersigned by James G. Blaine, Secretary of State. In fine condition, with some light creasing and edge toning.

5. DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page both sides, 10.5 x 14, June 1, 1881. An official letter of state addressed to “His Excellency, The Chief Executive of the Government of Peru,” signed nicely at the conclusion by Garfield, and countersigned by James G. Blaine, Secretary of State. In fine condition, with some light creasing.

6. LS as president, signed “J. A. Garfield,” one page, 5.5 x 9, Executive Mansion letterhead, May 10, 1881. Letter addressed to Mrs. Cecelia S. Sherman, Washington, D.C., thanking her for her kind note to “Mrs. Garfield. She is very ill and weak, but I hope and believe the worst is over.” In fine condition, with scattered light creasing and staining.

7. ANS as president, signed with his initials, "JAG,” penned on a 4 x 2.75 Executive Mansion card, March 19, 1881, addressed to Secretary of State Blaine. In full: “If convenient please come over in the course of an hour—I want to see you a few minutes.” In very good to fine condition, with overall toning, a small stain to the top, and old mounting residue on the reverse.

8. ANS as president, signed “J. A. Garfield,” one page, 5 x 4.5, Riggs House stationery, March 1, 1881, addressed to “My Dear Allison, Please call on me here as soon as you can.” In fine condition.

9. Rare partly-printed DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page, 22.5 x 17.75, May 23, 1881. President Garfield suspends Robert T. Clayton from the position of Consul of the United State of America at Callao, and designates Jesse H. Moore of Illinois as his replacement. Signed prominently at the conclusion by Garfield, and countersigned by Secretary of State Blaine. Embossed white seal remains affixed to the lower left. In fine condition, with intersecting folds and some light creasing.

10. Partly-printed DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page, 18.5 x 14.75, May 24, 1881. President Garfield appoints Augustus Brosius of Kennett Square, Pennsylvania to be an “Agent for the Indians of the Great Nemaha Agency in Nebraska.” Signed nicely at the conclusion by Garfield, and countersigned by A. Bell as Acting Secretary of the Interior. In very good to fine condition, with some creasing, edge toning, and scattered stains.

11. Partly-printed DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page, 7.75 x 10, April 15, 1881. President Garfield authorizes the Secretary of State to affix the Seal of the United States to “an envelope containing my letter in a reply to a congratulatory communication from the Captains Regent of the Republic of San Marino.” Signed at the conclusion by Garfield. In fine condition.

12. Partly-printed DS as president, signed “James A. Garfield,” one page, 7.75 x 10, June 27, 1881. President Garfield authorizes the Secretary of State to affix the Seal of the United States to “my proclamation of the convention supplementary to the consular convention of May 8, 1878, between the United States and Italy, signed on the 24th February 1881.” Signed at the conclusion by Garfield, just five days before he was shot by Guiteau. In very good to fine condition, with intersecting folds, and light creasing and toning along the right edge.

13. ANS as president, signed with his initials, “JAG,” one page, 4.5 x 2.75, Executive Mansion card, April 11, 1881. In full: “I will see Mr. Ballett at 10:30 tomorrow morning.” In fine condition, with a brush to one word of text, and a stain to the lower left corner.

14. ANS as president, signed “J. A. Garfield,” one page, 4 x 2.75, Executive Mansion card, March 25, 1881, addressed to “Dear Chandler,” in full: “Please call at eight and a half this evening, & oblige.” In fine condition, with a brush to one word of text. Includes the original envelope docketed in another hand.

15. Manuscript DS signed as president, “James A. Garfield,” one page, 8.5 x 13.75, March 8, 1881. Issued from the Executive Mansion, an order which states that in “the absence or sickness” of William Windom, Secretary of the Treasury, Henry French will be directed to perform the duties of Secretary.” Signed at the conclusion by Garfield. In fine condition, with toning and fading to the text from prior display; Garfield’s signature is unaffected.

16. Manuscript DS signed by President Chester A. Arthur, one page, 8.5 x 14, December 21, 1881, three months after the death of Garfield, which notes that French will perform the duties of the Secretary of the Treasury in “the absence or sickness of Honorable Charles J. Folger.” In fine condition, with toning and fading to the text from prior display; Arthur’s signature is unaffected.

17. Extremely rare 4.25 x 6.5 cabinet portrait of President Garfield in a bust-length profile pose, signed in ink as president, “J. A. Garfield.” This image was taken during Garfield’s presidency. In fine condition, with staining and surface loss at the corners of the mount.

18. Ink signature as president, “James A. Garfield, March 11, 1881,” on an off-white 6.75 x 4 album page. Accompanied by a silk memorial ribbon. In fine condition.

19. Ink signature as president, “James A. Garfield, March 12, 1881,” on an off-white 6.5 x 4 album page; the reverse signed by Rear Admiral John Lorimer Worden. Accompanied by a silk memorial ribbon. In fine condition, with faint show-through from Worden’s signature on the back.

20. Ink signature as president, “James A. Garfield, April 12th, 1881,” on an off-white 4.5 x 3.25 card. Accompanied by two silk memorial ribbons. In fine condition.

21. Ink signature as president, “J. A. Garfield, April 12, 1881,” on a gilt-edged off-white 4.5 x 3.5 card. In fine condition, with some faint toning to the right edge.

22. Ink signature as president, “James A. Garfield, June 8, 1881,” on an off-white 3.75 x 1.5 sheet. Accompanied by an original cabinet photo of Garfield published by C. M. Bell of Washington, D.C. In fine condition, with a single vertical fold.

23. Ink signature as president, “James A. Garfield, June 28th, 1881,” on an off-white 7.5 x 4.75 album page. Signed four days before his shooting. In fine condition.

24. Ink signature of his assassin, “Charles Guiteau,” on an off-white 3.75 x 2.25 card. In very good to fine condition, with light soiling to the front, and old mounting remnants on the back.

25. ALS as first lady, signed “Lucretia R. Garfield,” one page, 4.5 x 7, no date, “Friday morning,” addressed to Virginia Rolette Cameron, the wife of Garfield’s Attorney General, Wayne MacVeagh, inviting the couple to the White House to meet with herself and her husband. Lucretia adds her initials to a lengthy postscript. Includes the original Executive Mansion mailing envelope. In fine condition.

26. Ink signature, “James A. Garfield, Hiram, Ohio,” on an off-white 5.25 x 2.5 sheet, likely signed as a U.S. Congressman. Accompanied by an 1881 newspaper election banner for the Republican National Ticket. In fine condition, with a light stain to the center.

27. Ink signature, “J. A. Garfield, Ohio,” on an off-white 6.75 x 8.25 sheet, likely signed as a U.S. Congressman. Accompanied by a 1881 newspaper election banner for the Republican National Ticket. In fine condition.

28. ALS from Secretary of State James G. Blaine, signed “J. G. Blaine,” one page, 8 x 5, August 19, 1881, addressed to his son Walker Blaine in Augusta, Maine. The letter, penned after President Garfield was shot and at the halfway point of his treatment, offers news of hope: “The President’s condition this morning is more hopeful. His pulse is down to one hundred temperature / almost normal.” In fine condition, with an unobtrusive central vertical fold.

29. Fascinating handwritten dispatch from Doctor Willard Bliss, signed “D. W. Bliss,” who also signs on behalf of three other of President Garfield’s attending doctors: Joseph Barnes, Joseph Janvier Woodward, and Robert Reyburn. The dispatch, one page, 9 x 12, was issued from the Executive Mansion on July 10, 1881, just eight days after the president was shot. It reads, in part: “Such light changes taken place in the President’s condition since our telegram of yesterday…he received a hypodermic injection of one quarter of a grain of morphine…both yesterday and the day before the wound was dressed antiseptically twice during the twenty four hours…this morning it is discharging less pus than yesterday but its appearance is healthy.” In very good condition, with light creasing, a few small stains, and show-through from multiple pieces of old tape on the reverse.

30. Printed facsimile of a handwritten letter from the ailing President Garfield to his mother, Eliza R. Garfield, originally written from his bed on August 11, 1881, one page, 7 x 11, in part: “Don’t be disturbed by the conflicting reports about my condition…I am still weak and on my back but I am gaining every day and need only time and patience to bring me through.” In fine condition, with an old mounting strip along the left edge.

The remaining 17 pieces of period ephemera consist of the following: two memorial silk ribbons; a newspaper telegraph from the Republican Extra, dated July 2, 1881, with bold text: “President Garfield Shot!”; original sheet music for “President James A. Garfield’s Grand Funeral March,” written for piano by R.E. Mack; nine original cabinet portraits of Garfield, published by studios such as Brund, Sarony, and J. F. Jarvis, with a couple bearing facsimile signatures; and original cabinet portraits of Harry Garfield, the son of the president, Guiteau the assassin, U. S. Grant, and Andrew Johnson, the latter three bearing facsimile signatures. An unprecedented high-quality collection, and a veritable mother lode of rare material that would take decades to assemble from scratch.