4287

Newton S. Manross Collection [202971]

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:150.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 400.00 USD
Newton S. Manross Collection [202971]
CURRENT BID
0.00USD+ applicable fees & taxes.
ENTER YOUR MAXIMUM ABSENTEE BID[?]
You must bid at least
150.00USD
USD
150.00 x 1 unit = 150.00USDApplicable fees & taxes are added at checkout.
[?]Live Online Auction Starts In 2025 Nov 03 @ 08:00 (UTC-07:00 : PDT/MST)
FINAL AUCTION RECORD The Auctioneer’s podium notes serve as the final, legally binding record of the auction results, superseding any electronic bidding records. See Terms and Conditions
Four handwritten letters totally approximately 1,125 words, plus a 5.5”x8” pencil drawing, all in very good condition. Newton S. Manross, (1825-1862), was an accomplished American scientist and explorer who traveled extensively in Latin America before being killed in action in the Battle of Antietam at the age of 37. Born in Bristol, Connecticut, he graduated from Yale in 1850 and went on to receive a PhD in chemistry from the University of Gottingen. In 1853, he was part of exploring expedition searching for mineral deposits in South America and spent several months in the gold region of the Yuruari between Orinoco and Amazon rivers in Venezuela. In 1865, he went to Panama to explore for coal, iron-ore and other minerals. Later that year, he visited Mexico, where he traveled on horseback from Mexico City to the Pacific coast, prospecting for coal and iron, visiting the celebrated silver districts, and descending into the craters of Jorullo and Popocatepeti.
All four letters are from Manross to his wife, Charlotte. The first, dated July 23, 1856 is written from Bocas del Toro, Panama. Two are from Mexico, and the last from Maine. All have interesting content describing his life as an exploration geologist. From Panama he writes (in part) This is the last letter you will expect from me at this place, for I have finished my work here and shall start from the Pacific side of the Isthmus next Monday...expect to spend about a month there...will be four or five days of hard travelling in crossing for we shall have to go on foot and climb mountains 8 or 10 times higher than Wolcott (CT) and sleep in the woods at night, but that I am used to and don’t mind much. After that, we shall come to an open country where we can get horses then won’t we scamper...Our road will lead us over a mountain from which we can see the Atlantic and Pacific at the same time. In the Pacific where I am going there are pearl fisheries and I mean to...see if I cant fish up that precious pearl...Last night I went out to hear a man from Costa Rica play the guitar...There were nine persons present comprising nearly all the white men in Bocas del Toro, and some of us not so white as we might be...There was a Costa Rican, a Mosquito (6 feet 4 inches high), a Spaniard, Frenchman, Italian, Englishman, Canadian, New Granadian and a Yankee and if that wasn’t a speckled crowd, then I never saw one.
More that six months later, (February 18, 1857), he writes from Mexico City that he will be out of touch for awhile, as he is heading for the southern coast where he does no expect to be able to send or receive mail. We start with all our tents and camp fixings for a long journey in a part of the country where there are not many towns, and we expect to camp out most of the time...Had had a long look at your picture and bid it goodbye..
The next letter finds him in Acapulco, (May 2, 1857), where he reports If I was only at liberty to jump aboard the steamer that is coming along here this afternoon I might sit up with you some night about a fortnight hence, but unluckily I cannot take the quickest way home. I must ride back the whole long rocky road across Mexico, (about 600 miles), before I can fairly set out for home...I have seen all the mines I expect to and have but one more volcano to dive into (Old Popocatepely), so you may look for me home with only slight bit of brimstone in my whiskers. For the last two weeks I have been riding on the shore of the Pacific always with sound of the surf and sometimes on the beach where the waves would catch my horse up to his knees. I looked off to China as I rode along the beach and felt a sort of hankering to go that way home...
By November of that year, he was back in the United States, but once again traveling and exploring. The last letter (Nov 22, 1857) is written from Machias, Maine. ...where instead of being caught out upon the water in this hard weather as I have no doubt you are thinking, I am snugly lodged in a comfortable hotel in the midst of the pine lumber region with a roaring snow storm going on outside...the first comfortable night’s rest I have had since last Saturday night, the rest having been spent mostly on cars and stages. We have come all the way by land...If we do not get snowed in we shall go on to Lubec some thirty miles from here tomorrow and may still get back home this week. But if snow delays us either traveling or exploring when we get there, I may not get home until Thursday next.
The sketch of Fort San Ramon in Peru, and at the top margin is written in ink “N.S. Manross, Artist”. It appears to be a preliminary drawing for the lithographed view of the fort that appears in William Herndon’s Exploration of the Valley of the Amazon, (Washington, 1854). It is certainly possible that Manross visited the fort during his time in South American in 1853, but we have found no evidence that he was part of Herndon’s expedition. Possibly he supplied the sketch for use in the publication.
^
Date: 1856-57
Country (if not USA): Peru
State:
City:
Provenance: