| CDV photographs of Lincoln’s funeral top Cowan sale |
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CINCINNATI, Ohio — If a picture is worth a thousand words, then it should come as no surprise that an album of carte de visite photographs of Abraham Lincoln’s funeral procession was the top-selling lot of Cowan’s December American History auction. The album contained 97 CDVs and far outstripped its $8/10,000 estimate selling for $27,025.
The album featured images of three of the nine cities on the funeral route — Columbus, Ohio, and Chicago and Springfield, Ill. While valuable for its rarity as a whole, the album included several cartes de visite, which were exceptional individually, including an image of the processional arch in Chicago, and an image of Lincoln’s bedroom in his Springfield home. Additionally, several photographs are not illustrated in Twenty Days, Kunhardt and Kunhardt’s comprehensive 1965 account of Lincoln’s assassination and funeral.
The Dec. 9 auction featured 508 bidders from six countries and the 400 lots totaled $665,000.
Additionally, December’s American History auction was the department’s first sale with iCowans Bid Live available for bidders. Proceeds from iCowans bidders represented 10 percent of the auction total.
“Overall, I was very happy with the results of the auction. Though, we offered fewer lots than we have in past American History sales, the quality of the merchandise was elevated, as evidenced by the high per-lot average,” said Wes Cowan.
A rare quarter plate daguerreotype of Seneca Chief Gov. Blacksnake by artist F.C. Flint of Syracuse, N.Y., realized $22,325. Born near Seneca Lake about 1753, this important Seneca war-chief was known to his people as Chainbreaker; to Whites he was Gov. Blacksnake.
A young warrior, Chainbreaker was influential as a Seneca leader during the American Revolution, Indian conflicts at the end of the 18th century, and the War of 1812. He was also at the center of one of the great transformational events in Seneca history: the formation of the Code of Handsome Lake, which incorporated elements of Christianity and traditional Iroquois culture. Reproduced in several publications, this image that represents seminal events in American history garnered spirited bidding from collectors.
Western photography and ephemera made up a significant portion of the auction, with several lots represented in the top-selling items.
The Julia Tuell collection of 19 Plains Indian photographs brought $21,150. Tuell (1886-1960) settled in Lame Deer, Mont., with her husband, and became a keen observer of Northern Cheyenne daily life through her photographs. The collection offered by Cowan’s was comprised of several significant images, including photos of the Cheyenne Sun Dance and Animal Dance.
A California and Oregon Stage Line broadside on coated stock, circa 1866, described in Cowan’s catalog as “a cornerstone piece for any Western transportation collection,” drew significant interest from collectors.
Rare for its early vintage and compelling image, the broadside sold for $14,100.
A comprehensive archive of the California Gold Rush, complete with gold nugget, garnered $11,750. Featuring approximately 175 items, including manuscripts and documents, the archive from an Ohio family provided a glimpse into the lives of Americans during the late antebellum years, when the great national issues of sectionalism and slavery met with an unprecedented mobility. |
| 1/6/2010 |
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