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Auction archive: Lot number 56

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865) Autograph manuscript (signature...

Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$90,000
Auction archive: Lot number 56

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865) Autograph manuscript (signature...

Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$90,000
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Autograph manuscript (signature "A. Lincoln" in text), constituting Lincoln's official transcript of the "Subscription Book of the Capital Stock of the Alton and Sangamon Rail Road Company," incorporated 27 February 1843, transcribed in early 1851.
LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Autograph manuscript (signature "A. Lincoln" in text), constituting Lincoln's official transcript of the "Subscription Book of the Capital Stock of the Alton and Sangamon Rail Road Company," incorporated 27 February 1843, transcribed in early 1851. 8 pages, small 4to (8 x 6¼ in.) . Comprising a cover sheet (titled in Lincoln's hand, as above), 4 pages containing the joint stock subscription statement and 3½ pp. list of 91 shareholders' with the number of shares subscribed, 2 blank pages, final leaf with Lincoln's legal docket: "Alton and Sangamon Railroad Company vs. James A. Barret. Copy of contents of subscription book...." Bound in modern blue morocco gilt by the Lakeside Press . "I HAVE LABORED HARD TO FIND THE LAW": LINCOLN AS ATTORNEY FOR THE ALTON & SANGAMON RAIL ROAD COMPANY IN A PRECEDENT-SETTING LAWSUIT One of the most significant Lincoln legal documents to be offered for sale in many years: Lincoln's autograph list of the stockholders involved in the case of Alton and Sangamon Railroad v. Barret. Biographer David Herbert Donald calls it "Lincoln's first significant railroad case." In early 1851, Lincoln was retained by the railroad to sue Barret and the other defaulting shareholders. Barret's 30 shares made him one of the principal investors in the company. The tactical details of the suits are spelled out in Lincoln's letter of February 19, 1851 to William Martin a Commissioner for the sale of stock in the company. The four suits were to be brought against stockholders who had subscribed to the initial offering, made the required advance payment but had failed to make the additional installment payments on the stock when called upon to do so by the Directors. In preparation, Lincoln lists the proofs required in order to win a judgment, listing essential documents he will need. "We must prove," he advises Martin, "that the defendant is a Stockholder," "that the calls have been made," and "that due notice of the calls has been given." To prove that the defendants are in fact stockholders, Lincoln writes, he must produce "the subscription book with the defendant's name, and proof of the genuineness of the signature, together with any competent parole or evidence, that he made the advance payment' (Basler 2:99). The Alton & Sangamon Railroad line, chartered in 1847, was to run from Springfield to the Mississippi at Alton. Lincoln's meticulous transcript of the Subscription Book of the corporation provides unique insights into another, less well-known corporate venture. In the litigation for which the Subscription Book was transcribed, the Illinois Supreme Court's ruling in favor of Lincoln and the railroad set an important legal precedent, upholding the binding nature of a stockholder's contractual and financial obligations to the corporation in which he was both partner and investor. The list of subscribers is itself of considerable interest. Among the 91 names are "A. Lincoln" (subscribed 6 shares), J. Hay (probably the grandfather of Lincoln's later secretary), Ninian W. Edwards (1809-1889, husband of Mary Todd Lincoln's sister, 20 shares), John T. Stuart (1807-1885, Lincoln's law partner, 5 shares), Henry Yates (father of Illinois Governor Richard Yates, 10 shares), N.W. Matheny (Clerk of Sangamon County Court) and others. Some, perhaps many of the investors anticipated an increase in the value of their own landholdings, if the new line passed through or even near their property. (In the subscription book, Henry Yates, hedging his bets, had added a condition beneath his name: "if the Road intersects the M. & S R R at New Berlin.") The company was originally chartered to construct a line from Alton to Springfield, via New Berlin. In 1850, though, the Illinois General Assembly approved a new, more direct route, bypassing the landholdings of some investors. One aggrieved stockholder, James A. Barret, refused to make further installment payments for his 30 shares of stock, claiming

Auction archive: Lot number 56
Auction:
Datum:
22 May 2007
Auction house:
Christie's
22 May 2007, New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Autograph manuscript (signature "A. Lincoln" in text), constituting Lincoln's official transcript of the "Subscription Book of the Capital Stock of the Alton and Sangamon Rail Road Company," incorporated 27 February 1843, transcribed in early 1851.
LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865). Autograph manuscript (signature "A. Lincoln" in text), constituting Lincoln's official transcript of the "Subscription Book of the Capital Stock of the Alton and Sangamon Rail Road Company," incorporated 27 February 1843, transcribed in early 1851. 8 pages, small 4to (8 x 6¼ in.) . Comprising a cover sheet (titled in Lincoln's hand, as above), 4 pages containing the joint stock subscription statement and 3½ pp. list of 91 shareholders' with the number of shares subscribed, 2 blank pages, final leaf with Lincoln's legal docket: "Alton and Sangamon Railroad Company vs. James A. Barret. Copy of contents of subscription book...." Bound in modern blue morocco gilt by the Lakeside Press . "I HAVE LABORED HARD TO FIND THE LAW": LINCOLN AS ATTORNEY FOR THE ALTON & SANGAMON RAIL ROAD COMPANY IN A PRECEDENT-SETTING LAWSUIT One of the most significant Lincoln legal documents to be offered for sale in many years: Lincoln's autograph list of the stockholders involved in the case of Alton and Sangamon Railroad v. Barret. Biographer David Herbert Donald calls it "Lincoln's first significant railroad case." In early 1851, Lincoln was retained by the railroad to sue Barret and the other defaulting shareholders. Barret's 30 shares made him one of the principal investors in the company. The tactical details of the suits are spelled out in Lincoln's letter of February 19, 1851 to William Martin a Commissioner for the sale of stock in the company. The four suits were to be brought against stockholders who had subscribed to the initial offering, made the required advance payment but had failed to make the additional installment payments on the stock when called upon to do so by the Directors. In preparation, Lincoln lists the proofs required in order to win a judgment, listing essential documents he will need. "We must prove," he advises Martin, "that the defendant is a Stockholder," "that the calls have been made," and "that due notice of the calls has been given." To prove that the defendants are in fact stockholders, Lincoln writes, he must produce "the subscription book with the defendant's name, and proof of the genuineness of the signature, together with any competent parole or evidence, that he made the advance payment' (Basler 2:99). The Alton & Sangamon Railroad line, chartered in 1847, was to run from Springfield to the Mississippi at Alton. Lincoln's meticulous transcript of the Subscription Book of the corporation provides unique insights into another, less well-known corporate venture. In the litigation for which the Subscription Book was transcribed, the Illinois Supreme Court's ruling in favor of Lincoln and the railroad set an important legal precedent, upholding the binding nature of a stockholder's contractual and financial obligations to the corporation in which he was both partner and investor. The list of subscribers is itself of considerable interest. Among the 91 names are "A. Lincoln" (subscribed 6 shares), J. Hay (probably the grandfather of Lincoln's later secretary), Ninian W. Edwards (1809-1889, husband of Mary Todd Lincoln's sister, 20 shares), John T. Stuart (1807-1885, Lincoln's law partner, 5 shares), Henry Yates (father of Illinois Governor Richard Yates, 10 shares), N.W. Matheny (Clerk of Sangamon County Court) and others. Some, perhaps many of the investors anticipated an increase in the value of their own landholdings, if the new line passed through or even near their property. (In the subscription book, Henry Yates, hedging his bets, had added a condition beneath his name: "if the Road intersects the M. & S R R at New Berlin.") The company was originally chartered to construct a line from Alton to Springfield, via New Berlin. In 1850, though, the Illinois General Assembly approved a new, more direct route, bypassing the landholdings of some investors. One aggrieved stockholder, James A. Barret, refused to make further installment payments for his 30 shares of stock, claiming

Auction archive: Lot number 56
Auction:
Datum:
22 May 2007
Auction house:
Christie's
22 May 2007, New York, Rockefeller Center
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