Heritage Auctions and The Rail Splitter, USA-Dallas (TX)

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16-09-2016 – 01-01-1970

Lincoln and His Times

Abraham Lincoln auction sets world records at Heritage Auctions

The 1852 medal honoring Secretary of State Henry Clay – struck by the U.S. Mint in nearly 30 ounces of solid California gold and lovingly passed down through his family – sold for $346,000 to lead a record-setting special auction of memorabilia relating to Abraham Lincoln September 17, 2016 at Heritage Auctions. The event’s $2.4 million finale was a joint endeavor between Heritage Auctions and The Rail Splitter, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the respected publication for enthusiasts of Abraham Lincoln and related memorabilia.

Massive U.S. Mint Medal of “Pure California Gold,” Struck for Presentation to Henry Clay, Lincoln’s own “ideal of a great man,” in Recognition of His Half Century of Public Service.

“This was indeed one of the most important Lincoln auctions of the last 50 years,” said Tom Slater, Director of Americana Auctions at Heritage. “Never have I been so impressed and amazed at both the quality of the material and the passion of Lincoln collectors from all over the globe.”

Obverse and reverse of the medal.

Top lot honors were claimed by the solid gold medal presented to Henry Clay, a leader Lincoln himself called “a revered as a teacher and leader.” Bidding for the 3-1/2-inch diameter medal opened at the consignor’s minimum of $75,000 and quickly advanced to $346,000.

Obverse and reverse of the silver case in the form of a hunter’s case pocket watch.

The history behind the medal is as captivating as the design itself: three-time presidential candidate, former Secretary of State, Speaker of the House, and titan of the U.S. Senate Henry Clay was by 1852 confined to his rooms in the National Hotel in Washington, slowly dying of consumption. A group of prominent New York members of Clay’s Whig Party resolved to make a very special presentation to the statesman to honor his nearly half century of public service, which they accomplished shortly before Clay’s death.

Abraham Lincoln: Outstanding Signed Carte-de-Visite.

A perfectly signed carte-de-visite card image of a thoughtful Lincoln set a world record for an image of its type after seven bidders pushed the auction price to $175,000. The 1862 card carried an inscription on the back by Presidential Secretary John Hay certifying its authenticity.

A Highly Important Abraham Lincoln Letter to His First Fiancée, Mary Owens. This December 13, 1836 letter is one of our 16th president’s earliest surviving missives. It is the first of three written to Owens, and is considered very significant by Lincoln scholars for the insight it gives us into Lincoln the man.

The most intimate of keepsakes, relics and memorabilia relating to Lincoln’s personal life and that of those closest to him also brought record-setting prices. One of the most highly anticipated lots was a love letter from Lincoln to his first fiancée, Mary Owens, which sold for $137,500. Mary Todd Lincoln’s extraordinary jet black Silk Mourning Dress Ensemble opened at a modest $5,000 and ignited a bidding war that ended at an astounding $100,000, Slater said. “Certainly this is a record for any piece of Mary Lincoln memorabilia ever sold at auction,” Slater said.

Stephen A. Douglas: Wonderful Portrait Flag. 13.5″ x 8.5″ cotton flag with portrait of Douglas in the canton surrounded by thirteen meandering stars.

Rare campaign memorabilia included a Portrait Flag of political rival Stephen A. Douglass, which sold for $93,750; an 1860 Portrait Campaign Flag depicting a beardless Lincoln ended at $75,000; and a Unique 1864 Silk Parade Flag for “Lincoln and Johnson” brought $52,500.

One-of-a-kind, fresh-to-market relics from Confederate conspirators generated collector interest as the First National Confederate Flag presented by Belle Boyd, aka the “Siren of the Shenandoah,” thought lost to history until recently discovered in Switzerland, sold for $62,500. A rare lock of hair from Lincoln’s assassin John Wilkes Booth – snipped from the top of his head during his autopsy – sold for $31,250. Not to be outdone, an Evocative Lincoln Mourning Relic of a log cabin fashioned from a lock of the President’s hair also sold for $31,250.

You can browse through the auction catalog and the post-auction buys.

And this is The Rail Splitter – A Journal for the Lincoln Collector.