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Auction archive: Lot number 46

JACKSON, Andrew Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," w...

Estimate
US$7,000 - US$10,000
Price realised:
US$6,875
Auction archive: Lot number 46

JACKSON, Andrew Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," w...

Estimate
US$7,000 - US$10,000
Price realised:
US$6,875
Beschreibung:

JACKSON, Andrew. Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," with initialed postscript) to General Samuel J. Hays, Hermitage, 16 June 1839. 3 pages, 4to., address panel on page 4, slight browning, otherwise in excellent condition . [With:] JACKSON. Autograph free frank signature "Free Andrew Jackson " on page 4, circular postmark in blue ink.
JACKSON, Andrew. Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," with initialed postscript) to General Samuel J. Hays, Hermitage, 16 June 1839. 3 pages, 4to., address panel on page 4, slight browning, otherwise in excellent condition . [With:] JACKSON. Autograph free frank signature "Free Andrew Jackson " on page 4, circular postmark in blue ink. JACKSON LAMBASTS "A HYPOTHETICAL SCAMP" "WITHOUT PRINCIPLE OR TALENTS" AND "A MERE TOOL" OF JOHN QUINCY ADAMS A fine letter with a bitter election year denunciation of John Wesley Crockett (1808-1852) eldest son of the late, legendary frontiersman David Crockett (1786-1836), seeking re-election to a Tennessee congressional seat. Crockett senior had strongly opposed Jackson's Indian removal schemes and his withdrawal of federal funds from the Bank of the United States. In 1835 pro-Jackson forces had ousted him from Congress, pushing him to move to Texas where, in March 1836, he fell with the defenders of the Alamo. Jackson writes: "The democratic republican cause is brightening with us & in the eastern part of the state. Polk is sure of a majority in east Tennessee..." And, Jackson adds, in local races, "from all accounts I can get, Burton is gaining fast & will beat Bell" in a number of counties. He strongly warns Hays that "You must not permit that hypothetical scamp Crockett to be elected--he is the mere tool of [John] Bell & J.Q. Adams, without principle or talents & has become a good Whigg by learning the art of Lying & Slandering good & honest men. Virginia has done well, I received the returns last night...." Jackson also offers effusive congratulations to Hays for the recent dismissal of a lawsuit, instigated, Jackson is convinced, by "wretched...Whig sources." John Wesley Crockett had won election as a Democrat to his father's seat in the 25th Congress, to Jackson's annoyance and, in spite of Old Hickory's implacable enmity, won the seat again in the 26th Congress.

Auction archive: Lot number 46
Auction:
Datum:
7 Dec 2012
Auction house:
Christie's
7 December 2012, New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

JACKSON, Andrew. Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," with initialed postscript) to General Samuel J. Hays, Hermitage, 16 June 1839. 3 pages, 4to., address panel on page 4, slight browning, otherwise in excellent condition . [With:] JACKSON. Autograph free frank signature "Free Andrew Jackson " on page 4, circular postmark in blue ink.
JACKSON, Andrew. Autograph letter signed ("Andrew Jackson," with initialed postscript) to General Samuel J. Hays, Hermitage, 16 June 1839. 3 pages, 4to., address panel on page 4, slight browning, otherwise in excellent condition . [With:] JACKSON. Autograph free frank signature "Free Andrew Jackson " on page 4, circular postmark in blue ink. JACKSON LAMBASTS "A HYPOTHETICAL SCAMP" "WITHOUT PRINCIPLE OR TALENTS" AND "A MERE TOOL" OF JOHN QUINCY ADAMS A fine letter with a bitter election year denunciation of John Wesley Crockett (1808-1852) eldest son of the late, legendary frontiersman David Crockett (1786-1836), seeking re-election to a Tennessee congressional seat. Crockett senior had strongly opposed Jackson's Indian removal schemes and his withdrawal of federal funds from the Bank of the United States. In 1835 pro-Jackson forces had ousted him from Congress, pushing him to move to Texas where, in March 1836, he fell with the defenders of the Alamo. Jackson writes: "The democratic republican cause is brightening with us & in the eastern part of the state. Polk is sure of a majority in east Tennessee..." And, Jackson adds, in local races, "from all accounts I can get, Burton is gaining fast & will beat Bell" in a number of counties. He strongly warns Hays that "You must not permit that hypothetical scamp Crockett to be elected--he is the mere tool of [John] Bell & J.Q. Adams, without principle or talents & has become a good Whigg by learning the art of Lying & Slandering good & honest men. Virginia has done well, I received the returns last night...." Jackson also offers effusive congratulations to Hays for the recent dismissal of a lawsuit, instigated, Jackson is convinced, by "wretched...Whig sources." John Wesley Crockett had won election as a Democrat to his father's seat in the 25th Congress, to Jackson's annoyance and, in spite of Old Hickory's implacable enmity, won the seat again in the 26th Congress.

Auction archive: Lot number 46
Auction:
Datum:
7 Dec 2012
Auction house:
Christie's
7 December 2012, New York, Rockefeller Center
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