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Napoleon

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:20,000.00 - 25,000.00 USD
Napoleon

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Auction Date:2019 Feb 04 @ 18:00 (UTC-05:00 : EST/CDT)
Location:One Beacon St., 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
Elegant wooden chair said to have been used by Napoleon Bonaparte while passing through Courcelles en route to the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, as attested to in two French-language affidavits signed and notarized in Fontaine l'Eveque, Wallonia, Belgium in the 1920s. Additionally includes a prayer card belonging to a past owner of the chair, and a period souvenir postcard of the chair taken by a significant Namur, Belgium photographer. An analysis of these records, bolstered by additional genealogical research, strongly suggests that Napoleon used this chair en route to Waterloo.

The side chair itself, which measures approximately 17.25 x 35 x 14.25, was fashioned from a hardwood, possibly maple, ca. 1800. It is a vernacular interpretation of the Empire furniture style then in vogue on the Continent, as evidenced by its rectilinear lines and geometric motifs. An elegant fanned backrest comprised of tapering spindles unites the stepped top and bottom rails. Rustic country touches include the straight stiles terminating in acorn finials, and the caned seat. The chair has elaborately turned front stretchers demonstrating both ball and faceted six-sided turning. The front legs are partly tapered and terminate in toupie feet, while the back legs are straight. In very good to near fine condition. Expected surface wear includes minor checking and past insect damage, especially to the left bottom stretcher and top rail. One backrest spindle is missing, and a second is detached and broken but included. The topmost front box stretcher appears to be missing.

The outlawed ex-emperor Napoleon escaped from the island of Elba in February 1815. Determined to orchestrate one last-ditch effort to conquer Europe, Napoleon left Paris with approximately 100,000 troops on June 12, 1815. Three days later, his forces crossed the Sambre River near the city of Charleroi. Napoleon's armies marched with incredible speed through the Netherlandish countryside (today, central Belgium) on their way to Waterloo. Napoleon secured his last victory at the Plains of Fleurus near Ligny on June 16th. Two days later, his forces were annihilated by allied British, German, and Dutch armies at Waterloo.

The two affidavits testify that a local woman named Pauline Joseph Cambier (1817–1868), whose father had owned the chair, often recounted that it was once used by Napoleon. The first, co-signed by Elise Neve and L. Wattier, and dated May 5, 1921, in part (translated): "The undersigned, in perfect lucidity, states and certifies that he very often, and for many years, heard Pauline Cambier, Joseph Lequeux’s wife, say that she had come from Courcelles bringing with her a chair that had been given to her by her father, on which Napoleon had rested while staying at his home in 1815 on his way to the battle of Waterloo. She always kept it with greatest care. The said chair is presently owned by Mr. Henry Hecq-Andre at Fontaine l'Eveque."

The second, signed by Marie Lebree [Sister Marie-Josepha], who was Mother Superior at the Fontaine l'Eveque Hospital established in 1900, dated March 11, 1924, in part (translated): "The undersigned, Marie Lebree, in religion Sr Mie Josepha, Mother Superior at Fontaine l'Eveque Hospital, states that Mr. Isidore Wattier of this city has signed an attestation stating that Mr. Henri Heck Andre from the same area is in possession of a chair which Napoleon I used at Courcelles while passing through on his way to the battle of Waterloo in 1815."

According to genealogical records, Pauline Cambier's father, Jean-Francois Cambier (1788–1843) was registered as a flour seller in 1812 and a miller in 1814. By 1822, he is listed in the records as a publican. Courcelles is located just five miles northwest of Charleroi, where Napoleon and his forces crossed the Sambre River on June 15th. It is more than possible that, on his way to Waterloo, Napoleon stayed at Pauline Cambier's father's farmhouse or tavern. Pauline Joseph Cambier (1817–1868) was Jean-Francois's second oldest daughter. She married a much younger man named Joseph Alexis Lequeux (born 1835) in Fontaine l'Eveque on April 11, 1871, but her prayer card indicates that she died less than ten years later.

The early 20th-century postcard photograph of the chair is printed on the reverse, "A. Gilles-Ledoux, rude la Croix, 8, Namur. Teleph. : 2163," referring to Armand Gilles (1913–1987), the successor of his family's multigenerational photographic studio in Namur, Belgium. The Gilles-Ledoux studio had been established in 1863 by Francois Gilles (1829–1893), this postcard photographer's great-uncle.