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Auction archive: Lot number 109

Committee of Mechanics, New York City | Committee of Mechanicks' slate of New York nominees for the First Continental Congress

Estimate
US$3,000 - US$4,000
Price realised:
US$4,410
Auction archive: Lot number 109

Committee of Mechanics, New York City | Committee of Mechanicks' slate of New York nominees for the First Continental Congress

Estimate
US$3,000 - US$4,000
Price realised:
US$4,410
Beschreibung:

Committee of Mechanics, New York CityAdvertisement. At a general Meeting of the Committee of Mechanicks, at the House of Edward Bardin, yesterday Evening, the Nomination of the Committee of Merchants, of Delegates to serve at the General Congress, was taken into Consideration, and the Names of the Persons respectively read for their Concurrence. … [New York, 6 July 1774] Printed handbill (145 x 156 mm). Backed with linen. Half black morocco slipcase, chemise. A rare Revolutionary handbill, dated 6 July 1774, publishing a slate of New York nominees for the First Continental Congress. The Intolerable Acts gave impetus for a convention of delegates from all thirteen American colonies. Massachusetts, which was the target of the Intolerable Acts, was the first colony to elect Congressional delegates, on 17 June 1774; North Carolina had the latest elections, selecting her three delegates on 17 August. In June, New York had a lively debate about her representatives. The New York Committee of Merchants had nominated James Duane, John Alsop Isaac Low, Philip Livingston, and John Jay as the delegates for the city and county of New York; this group of candidates was also supported by the Committee of Correspondence. As the present handbill explains, the Committee of Mechanicks, which was affiliated with the radical Sons of Liberty, objected to the nominations of Alsop and Duane and instead nominated Leonard Lispenard and Alexander McDougall, along with Low, Livingston, and Jay. (McDougall and his cohort were evidently behind a related handbill announcing a public meeting for the evening of July 6 at which "every Friend to the true Interest of this distressed Country" would be informed of "Matters of the Utmost Importance to their Reputation and Security, as Freemen"; see Evans 13095.) However, the original five Merchants Committee nominees were all elected and attended the the first session of the Continental Congress, September 1774, at Carpenters' Hall, Philadelphia. Very Scarce: only one other copy has appeared at auction since at least 1975. REFERENCEEvans 13093

Auction archive: Lot number 109
Beschreibung:

Committee of Mechanics, New York CityAdvertisement. At a general Meeting of the Committee of Mechanicks, at the House of Edward Bardin, yesterday Evening, the Nomination of the Committee of Merchants, of Delegates to serve at the General Congress, was taken into Consideration, and the Names of the Persons respectively read for their Concurrence. … [New York, 6 July 1774] Printed handbill (145 x 156 mm). Backed with linen. Half black morocco slipcase, chemise. A rare Revolutionary handbill, dated 6 July 1774, publishing a slate of New York nominees for the First Continental Congress. The Intolerable Acts gave impetus for a convention of delegates from all thirteen American colonies. Massachusetts, which was the target of the Intolerable Acts, was the first colony to elect Congressional delegates, on 17 June 1774; North Carolina had the latest elections, selecting her three delegates on 17 August. In June, New York had a lively debate about her representatives. The New York Committee of Merchants had nominated James Duane, John Alsop Isaac Low, Philip Livingston, and John Jay as the delegates for the city and county of New York; this group of candidates was also supported by the Committee of Correspondence. As the present handbill explains, the Committee of Mechanicks, which was affiliated with the radical Sons of Liberty, objected to the nominations of Alsop and Duane and instead nominated Leonard Lispenard and Alexander McDougall, along with Low, Livingston, and Jay. (McDougall and his cohort were evidently behind a related handbill announcing a public meeting for the evening of July 6 at which "every Friend to the true Interest of this distressed Country" would be informed of "Matters of the Utmost Importance to their Reputation and Security, as Freemen"; see Evans 13095.) However, the original five Merchants Committee nominees were all elected and attended the the first session of the Continental Congress, September 1774, at Carpenters' Hall, Philadelphia. Very Scarce: only one other copy has appeared at auction since at least 1975. REFERENCEEvans 13093

Auction archive: Lot number 109
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