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VIRGINIA BOND ISSUED TO "A FREE MAN OF COLOR", WITH LAST CONFEDERATE CAPITOL FLAG REMNANT

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Militaria Start Price:350.00 USD Estimated At:700.00 - 900.00 USD
VIRGINIA BOND ISSUED TO  A FREE MAN OF COLOR , WITH LAST CONFEDERATE CAPITOL FLAG REMNANT
A most unusual Confederate bond, a Commonwealth of Virginia State Stock (in red) (Criswell #61A), July 14, 1860, incredibly made out to: "Mitchell Yancey a free man of color...". The bond, recovered from the Confederate Treasury only days after the city fell, bears an attached 2" x 8" section of the last flag to fly over the Confederate capitol building. The flag had been captured by American soldiers and divided among them with Union Chaplain John O. Foster, the first Union chaplain to preach a sermon in the newly-"liberated" city, also receiving a section of the huge flag. This stock certificate, along with many other stocks and bonds, was taken from the Confederate Treasury only days after the city fell by Foster, who had been present at Richmond's capitulation, and his visit to the Treasury is noted in his diary. Foster also noted that the section of fabric he had obtained had been part of the Confederate flag that had flown over the Confederacy's capitol building. Some staining at right with a weak, somewhat brittle fold thereat, hand-cut with uneven margins (as is usually the case), still quite good. Documents included picture Foster's note showing the flag's origin, with additional copies of his diary transcript, biography, analysis of the flag material, and so on. Our genealogical research shows that according to the 1880 census, a mulatto named Mitchell Yancey was born ca. 1834, most likely in Virginia, and in 1880 was employed as a "Waiter in Family". He was married to "Charlot" and had four children between the ages of 7 and 21.

Estimate: $700 - 900.

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Part I: Lots 1-979 - September 27th, 2012

Part II: Lots 980-1845 - September 28th, 2012