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Auction archive: Lot number 70

TAYLOR, Zachary. Autograph letter signed ("Z. Taylor") as Major General, TO JEFFERSON DAVIS, "Camp near Monterey Mexico," 16 August 1847. 6½ pages, 4to (10 x 7 7/8 in.), professionally restored and silked, minor loss to last page affecting one letter...

Auction 27.03.2002
27 Mar 2002
Estimate
US$30,000 - US$50,000
Price realised:
US$82,250
Auction archive: Lot number 70

TAYLOR, Zachary. Autograph letter signed ("Z. Taylor") as Major General, TO JEFFERSON DAVIS, "Camp near Monterey Mexico," 16 August 1847. 6½ pages, 4to (10 x 7 7/8 in.), professionally restored and silked, minor loss to last page affecting one letter...

Auction 27.03.2002
27 Mar 2002
Estimate
US$30,000 - US$50,000
Price realised:
US$82,250
Beschreibung:

TAYLOR, Zachary. Autograph letter signed ("Z. Taylor") as Major General, TO JEFFERSON DAVIS, "Camp near Monterey Mexico," 16 August 1847. 6½ pages, 4to (10 x 7 7/8 in.), professionally restored and silked, minor loss to last page affecting one letter of signature and a few letters of text . TAYLOR PREDICTS THAT IN THE BATTLES OVER SLAVERY "THE UNION WILL BE BLOWN TO ATOMS, OR WILL NO LONGER BE WORTH PRESERVING," AND WEIGHS HIS CHANCES FOR THE PRESIDENCY Unarguably one of the most important letters of Zachary Taylor in private hands, discussing the likelihood of winning nomination for President, the mounting dangers of the slavery issue and his conception of executive power. Still in Mexico, six months after winning the Battle of Buena Vista, Taylor had been besieged with Democratic and Whig solicitations to run for President on their tickets. Here, writing to future Confederate President Jefferson Davis (who had recently returned home after being wounded in the war), Taylor discusses his thoughts about his "reaching the first office in the gift of a great & free people." Taylor, who had not voted in forty years, expresses wonderment at his sudden political power, predicting "if the election was to take place immediately or even next November, I would in all probability be elected to that important office." Davis and Taylor had been comrades in arms, and "owing to the intimate relations known to exist between you & myself," Taylor anticipates that Davis may be importuned by people seeking "my views on various matters which have divided the two great parties." Referring to party conflicts, he notes: "many of them may for the most part be considered as settled," yet "many rabid politicians on both sides hold on to the whole of them with great tenacity," "as if the existance of the union depended on their doing so." Taylor offers a candid and very revealing statement on how he would act, as President, in regard to the controversy over slavery: "While I would on the question of slavery respect the opinions & feeling of the non slaveholding states...& be careful not to...interfere with legal rights as regards the same, I would be equally careful that no encroachments were made on the rights of the citizens of the slave holding states..." Claiming impartiality, he vows, to "let justice be done to & in every part of the country...in accordance to the provisions of the Constitution, which seems to me to be the proper & only course to pursue by the Chief Magistrate, Congress & the Judiciary as the best & only one[s] to preserve the Union." During his Presidency, Taylor's refusal to support the Compromise plan of Henry Clay in 1850 nearly resulted in the rupture of the Union that he hoped to prevent. Then, in a striking passage, Taylor reveals his own trepidations over the political impact of slavery and rampant sectionalism: "I look on the question of slavery as the most important one now or that has ever been before the country, since the organization of the government, as regards the perpetuity of the union, for such appears to be the feelings of the people in the two portions of our country whose institutions differ alone in that respect, brought about by the intemperate zeal of the fanatics of the north, & the intemperate zeal of a few politicians of the south, that the subject will no longer admit of a proper & calm discussion, neither in the pulpit, in Congress, in the newspapers, or in primary assemblies of the people, the moment anything of this kind is attempted, men appear not only to lose their temper as well as their reason...only adding fuel to the flames & to widen instead of healing the breach between the parties concerned." A southerner by inclination, Taylor expresses deep concerns over growing northern anti-slavery factions, and prophetically vows that "the moment they go beyond that point where resistance becomes right & proper, let the South act promptly, boldly & decisively with arms in their hands if necessary

Auction archive: Lot number 70
Auction:
Datum:
27 Mar 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

TAYLOR, Zachary. Autograph letter signed ("Z. Taylor") as Major General, TO JEFFERSON DAVIS, "Camp near Monterey Mexico," 16 August 1847. 6½ pages, 4to (10 x 7 7/8 in.), professionally restored and silked, minor loss to last page affecting one letter of signature and a few letters of text . TAYLOR PREDICTS THAT IN THE BATTLES OVER SLAVERY "THE UNION WILL BE BLOWN TO ATOMS, OR WILL NO LONGER BE WORTH PRESERVING," AND WEIGHS HIS CHANCES FOR THE PRESIDENCY Unarguably one of the most important letters of Zachary Taylor in private hands, discussing the likelihood of winning nomination for President, the mounting dangers of the slavery issue and his conception of executive power. Still in Mexico, six months after winning the Battle of Buena Vista, Taylor had been besieged with Democratic and Whig solicitations to run for President on their tickets. Here, writing to future Confederate President Jefferson Davis (who had recently returned home after being wounded in the war), Taylor discusses his thoughts about his "reaching the first office in the gift of a great & free people." Taylor, who had not voted in forty years, expresses wonderment at his sudden political power, predicting "if the election was to take place immediately or even next November, I would in all probability be elected to that important office." Davis and Taylor had been comrades in arms, and "owing to the intimate relations known to exist between you & myself," Taylor anticipates that Davis may be importuned by people seeking "my views on various matters which have divided the two great parties." Referring to party conflicts, he notes: "many of them may for the most part be considered as settled," yet "many rabid politicians on both sides hold on to the whole of them with great tenacity," "as if the existance of the union depended on their doing so." Taylor offers a candid and very revealing statement on how he would act, as President, in regard to the controversy over slavery: "While I would on the question of slavery respect the opinions & feeling of the non slaveholding states...& be careful not to...interfere with legal rights as regards the same, I would be equally careful that no encroachments were made on the rights of the citizens of the slave holding states..." Claiming impartiality, he vows, to "let justice be done to & in every part of the country...in accordance to the provisions of the Constitution, which seems to me to be the proper & only course to pursue by the Chief Magistrate, Congress & the Judiciary as the best & only one[s] to preserve the Union." During his Presidency, Taylor's refusal to support the Compromise plan of Henry Clay in 1850 nearly resulted in the rupture of the Union that he hoped to prevent. Then, in a striking passage, Taylor reveals his own trepidations over the political impact of slavery and rampant sectionalism: "I look on the question of slavery as the most important one now or that has ever been before the country, since the organization of the government, as regards the perpetuity of the union, for such appears to be the feelings of the people in the two portions of our country whose institutions differ alone in that respect, brought about by the intemperate zeal of the fanatics of the north, & the intemperate zeal of a few politicians of the south, that the subject will no longer admit of a proper & calm discussion, neither in the pulpit, in Congress, in the newspapers, or in primary assemblies of the people, the moment anything of this kind is attempted, men appear not only to lose their temper as well as their reason...only adding fuel to the flames & to widen instead of healing the breach between the parties concerned." A southerner by inclination, Taylor expresses deep concerns over growing northern anti-slavery factions, and prophetically vows that "the moment they go beyond that point where resistance becomes right & proper, let the South act promptly, boldly & decisively with arms in their hands if necessary

Auction archive: Lot number 70
Auction:
Datum:
27 Mar 2002
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Rockefeller Center
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