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SETH KALLER, INC. 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Grant’s Superintendent of Freed Slaves to the American Freedmen’s Inquiry Commission More... * Monumental Lincoln Deathbed Oil Painting by James Burns, 1866 * Rare Houston Texas Newspapers: the Juneteenth Order Freeing Slaves, Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, and Much More * George F. Root’s Autograph Sheet Music for “The Battle-Cry of Freedom!” * Civil War “The Union Forever” Flag Made by Philadelphia Sailmaker, ca. 1861 * Grant’s Infamous General Order 11 Expelling Jews—and Lincoln’s Revocation of it * Great Report on the Hunt for Lincoln’s Assassin and Claim for Reward by Irish War Hero * South Carolina’s Reconstruction Governor’s Copy of Reconstruction Acts, Including Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment * J.E.B. Stuart Writes to Legendary Confederate Spy Laura Ratcliffe * A Union Officer’s Commission, and Field Report from the 17th Connecticut Regiment at the Battle of Gettysburg * An Eloquent Farewell to His Troops from a Massachusetts General Who Marched to the Sea with Sherman and Fought in the Civil War’s Last Battle * The Gettysburg Address – New York Semi-Weekly Tribune First Day of Printing * Miscegenation, or the Millennium of Abolitionism – Stirring Fear of Interracial Marriage Before 1864 Presidential Election * “STAND BY THE LAW!” Working Class Arguments for Peace in New York City in Wake of Draft Riots * The Dreadful Dred Scott Decision, First Edition with Added Illustrations * 1865 General Orders, Including Many Regarding Lincoln’s Assassination * The Gettysburg Address – November 20, 1863 Rare First Day Printing by “Lincoln’s Dog” John Forney in the Philadelphia Press * Hand-Made Union Patriotic and Religious Song Book * Report of Attacks on Forts Walker and Beauregard * “Separating the Loyal from the Disloyal” in Reconstruction North Carolina * Campaign Document Uses Civil War’s Costs Against President Johnson * First Federal Occupation of Winchester Broadside * Beauregard’s Thanks for Donation for “our gallant soldiers now battling manfully for our rights & our Independence…” * On the Day He was Promoted to Rear Admiral, Farragut Writes from His Flagship During the Bombardment of Vicksburg, Mississippi * Autograph Book Kept by a Jewish Former U.S. and Future Confederate Naval Officer Imprisoned at Fort Warren, Signed by Dozens of Fellow Political and Military Prisoners * Edwin Stanton ALS Prelude to Impeachment of Andrew Johnson * Treasury Secretary Salmon Chase Insists on Proper Funding for Soldiers * Currier & Ives Cartoon Mocks Stephen Douglas for Campaigning in 1860 * Prang & Co. Broadside with Maps of Early Civil War Hotspots * “Black bellied Yankees” at The Battle of Fort Blakely * A Day After Grant’s Capture of Fort Henry, Confederate General Lovell Weakens New Orleans in a Futile Attempt to Shore Up Fort Donelson * Scathingly Anti-British Broadside Heralds Daniel Webster * “Copperheads Vigorously Prosecuting Peace: Is it the Peace YOU Want?” * Abraham Lincoln: Large 1861 Inauguration Chromolithograph * Saving Free-Born African American from Life of Slavery * Celebrating a Report of McClellan’s Death * Confederate Governor of Kentucky Seeks Prominent Louisville Editor’s Support for Secession in the Summer of 1861 * A Huge Print of the Great Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison * Civil War Hero David Dixon Porter Expresses Support for the Chinese in a Time of Hostility * Illustrator Frank Leslie Publishes Fanciful Grand Reception of Civil War Notables as a Subscription Premium * President Andrew Johnson’s Copy of “New-York Daily Tribune” Detailing Proposed Regulations for Alaska * South Carolina Impressment Agent Negotiates With General Beauregard for the Release of Slaves to their Masters * Congressmen Who Signed Thirteenth Amendment Abolishing Slavery * On the Day of the First Battle of Bull Run, Confederate Ordnance Chief Josiah Gorgas Orders Equipment for 100,000 Troops * Unique Sea Mosses Book Sold at the New York Metropolitan Fair to Benefit Sick and Wounded Union Troops * 161 Young Men of Providence, R.I. Found “Loyal League” Pledged to Support the Union * Fourth of July Oration from Massachusetts on Eve of the Civil War * Opposing the Confederate Draft * Slavery Divides New York Legislature in 1844 * A Copperhead Newspaper Prints, Then Criticizes, the Emancipation Proclamation * Lincoln and Congressmen Who Signed Thirteenth Amendment Abolishing Slavery * Senator Judah P. Benjamin of Louisiana 1859 speech supporting acquisition of Cuba * New York Times Carriers’ Address Reviews the Year 1863 in Bad Verse, Including Freeing of Russia’s Serfs, and the Battle of Gettysburg * “I thought Cump would advise you as to the movements here…” * A Fighting Vermont Regiment Summary of Actions after Gettysburg, July 5-13, 1863 * A Map of the Baruch College Area of New York City * Senator Sprague of Rhode Island Writes About Fascinating Debates in Congress Involving Freedom for the Families of African American Recruits and the Limits of Free Speech in the Senate * The Defense in Ex parte Milligan Argues That Even During War the Federal Government Can’t Use Military Trials Where Civilian Courts Are Operative * “The Christian Banner” – Pro-Confederate Paper From Union-Occupied Fredericksburg * The Drafter of the 14th Amendment Quotes Abolitionist Congressman Thaddeus Stevens * Union Volunteers Refreshment Saloon * Admiral Porter Reluctantly Turns Down General Sherman’s Invitation to a “Grand Reunion” in Chicago; and Sherman Reads These Excerpts to the Veterans * Returning the Western World to Blockade Duty to Squeeze the Confederacy * Prior to 1864 presidential election, McClellan’s former groomsman tries to even the field * Congressmen Order Copies of Senator Jacob Collamer’s Speech on Bleeding Kansas * Requesting Another Battery of Artillery During the Siege of Yorktown * Clothing the 1st Vermont Cavalry in the Civil War * The Nation Mourns * The Success of Black Troops At Petersburg, Virginia, Under Butler * “The Excursion of the Bought Nominations” Showing Balloon “Union League” * “The Slave Sale, or Come Who Bids?” Abolitionist Sheet Music * Lincoln’s Vice President Talks Local Politics * Ohio Reformers Use Rhode Island’s Dorr Rebellion to Justify Their Own Behavior * “Black Republican” Salt River Ticket * Responding to Grant’s Postwar Request for a Report of Guns Captured at Fort Donelson, His First Success * 1864 Campaign Blames McClellan’s Failures on Lincoln, Comparing the President’s Treatment of McClellan and Grant * Creating Two New Civil War Military Departments * Naval Commander Who Prevented Filibustering Expedition against Mexico, and Then Captured Slave Ships and Freed over 1,350 Slaves * Future Hero of Little Round Top Advises a Friend on Getting a Leave of Absence * Civil War Veteran in Maryland Predicts the War Will End Soon * Patriotic Poem by Gov. John A. Andrew * A Georgia Man Writes from Frederic City, Maryland, Hoping to Liberate Some ‘greenies’ from the “Hamites or the ‘freedmen’” Celebrating Passage of the “dirty 15th Amendment” * A New York Soldier’s Affidavit Allowing a Proxy to Vote in the 1864 Election * Civil War Song Sheet: When Johnny Comes Marching Home * Illinois Governor Richard Yates’ Fourth of July Address at the End of Civil War – Unhappy that the Nation Would not Execute Jefferson Davis * Rebel Deserters Coming within the Union Lines * Advertisement for Temperance Restaurant in New York City * Evacuating Elizabeth City and Leaving Nothing for the Rebels, to the Dismay of Freedpeople and Unionists * Seesaw - Gloucester, MA - Drawn by Winslow Homer * Edwin M. Stanton Portrait, Based on a Photograph by Matthew Brady * The Army of the Potomac Arriving at Yorktown from Williamsburg * The Massacre at Fort Pillow * Unusual Caricatures of Southern Aristocrats by Union Soldier on Letter to Parents * Board of Engineers to Review Sea Coast Fortifications, Including New York * Lincoln, the War, and Emancipation * Lincoln Reviews the Army of the Potomac -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER GREAT GIFTS OFFERINGS * Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Four Freedoms Speech – Inscribed and Signed by FDR – in the “Missy” LeHand Archive * Martin Luther King Jr. Inscribes Stride Toward Freedom to Pioneer Civil Rights Leader A. Philip Randolph * Thomas Jefferson Signed Act of Congress Authorizing Copper Coinage (the First Legal Tender Produced by U.S. Government) More... * The Building Blocks of Albert Einstein’s Creative Mind * Abraham Lincoln Signed Check to “William Johnson (Colored)”—Who Accompanied the President to Antietam and Gettysburg * FDR’s First Inaugural Address in the Midst of the Great Depression * Albert Einstein by Marc Mellon * President Harry S. Truman Signs Potsdam Declaration Demanding Japanese Surrender for Himself, Winston Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek * Alexander Hamilton’s Initial Steps to Create a National Banking System * Earliest Known Printing of “Tikvatenu” [Our Hope – the origin of “Hatikvah”] Inscribed by Author Naftali Herz Imber to Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the “revivalist of the Hebrew language” * Winston Churchill by Marc Mellon * George Washington Signed Military Commission, Preparing for a Decisive Victory Against Native Americans and the British in the Midwest * George Washington’s First Presidential Thanksgiving Proclamation * George F. Root’s Autograph Sheet Music for “The Battle-Cry of Freedom!” * President Kennedy Sends a Martin Luther King, Jr. Tribute to Civil Rights Leader A. Philip Randolph * Continental Congress Declares Independence – on July 2, 1776 * For Washington, Hamilton Confirms Receipt of Hessian Troop Movement Intelligence * Thomas Jefferson Transmits the First Patent Act to Governor of New York George Clinton, Who Later Replaced Aaron Burr as Jefferson’s Vice President * Georgia O’Keeffe’s Folding Safari Chair (or “Bunch of Sticks” She Used for Painting in the Desert) and Archive of 18 Autograph and Typed Letters Signed by O’Keeffe to Artist Marilyn Thuma * The Only Known Document in Hamilton’s Hand on a Legal Case Involving James Reynolds * Rare Important Declaration of Independence Linen Handkerchief * Unique Inscribed Set of John Marshall’s Life of George Washington, With Joseph Story Letter to the Daughter of the Late Associate Justice Henry Brockholst Livingston, Conveying Marshall’s Thanks and Noting That He Will Be Sending to Her These Very Books * President Woodrow Wilson Asks Congress for a Declaration of War * President Wilson Urges Americans to Support the “Stricken Jewish People” of Europe During World War I * Alexander Hamilton Writes to His Beloved Wife, Eliza, About the Deteriorating Health of Her Younger Sister, Peggy * Civil War “The Union Forever” Flag Made by Philadelphia Sailmaker, ca. 1861 * Lyndon B. Johnson Signing Pen for Voting Rights Act of 1965 * Hamilton LS to Bank of New York Advising That Collectors Will No Longer Receive Its Notes * Alexander Hamilton Signed Registration for Schooner Robert of Baltimore * Hamilton Serves as Surety for Loan to Fellow Attorney and Second in His Duel with Burr * Early Printing of the U.S. Constitution, in American Museum—One of the First Two Magazine Printings of the Constitution * George Washington’s Famous Letter to American Roman Catholics: A Message of Thankfulness, Patriotism, and Inclusiveness * Thomas Jefferson Pays Import Duty on Famous Louis Chantrot Obelisk Clock * George Washington: Rare 1777 Revolutionary War Hand Colored Engraving * Major General Alexander Hamilton Message to Father of American Viticulture During Quasi-War with France * Theodore Roosevelt, Furious with Cuba's "Pointless" 1906 Revolution * Harry S. Truman on His 1948 Proclamation Recognizing Israel * A Week After Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK Asks Treasury Secretary Dillon About the Possibility of a Run on Gold if the Crisis Had Lasted Longer or Involved a Total Blockade * Two months Before Declaring Israel’s Independence, Ben-Gurion Counters American Backpedaling and Pushes to Start the Temporary Government * Amelia Earhart and Richard E. Byrd—Aviation Pioneers in Signed Group Photo * Aviation Pioneer Amelia Earhart Returns from European Tour with Publisher Husband * Masonic Documents: James P. Kimball archive of master Mason, geologist, and Director of the United States Mint - with superb engravings * Brown University Holds First Commencement in 1769 - as Rhode Island College * FDR’s Personal Copy of 1934 Textile Industry Crisis Board Report Countersigned by Secretary of Labor Francis Perkins, the First Woman Presidential Cabinet Member * J.E.B. Stuart Writes to Legendary Confederate Spy Laura Ratcliffe * David Ben-Gurion ALS—Preventing a War between the Religious and the Secular in Early Israel * Debating the Bill of Rights Amendments in 1789 * The Gettysburg Address – New York Semi-Weekly Tribune First Day of Printing * The Second Naturalization Act - Establishing Laws for Citizenship * President John Quincy Adams’ Remarks & Toast Commemorating William Penn’s Landing * Connecticut Governor’s Proclamation Calling for a Day of Thanksgiving to Commemorate the Defeat of the French in Canada, and the Taking of Quebec * President Jefferson Sends, Rather than Delivers, His First State of the Union * 1915 Women’s Suffrage Poster * Jackie Robinson says a talk radio host “needs to do a lot of soul searching.” * Whig Presidential Nominee William Henry Harrison to Daniel Webster * “George Washington” - Keith Carter Photograph * 1778 Muster List, Including Rejected African American Recruit * Large 1801 Folio Engraving of Thomas Jefferson as New President * Nine Months of a Hawaiian Missionary Newspaper, With the First Report of King Kamehameha III’s Death and Perry’s Mission to Japan * Ben-Gurion to Moshe Sharett on Sharett’s Resignation as Foreign Minister * Acquittal of Printer John Peter Zenger in Colonial New York Establishes Foundation for American Freedom of the Press * Prang & Co. Broadside with Maps of Early Civil War Hotspots * President Theodore Roosevelt Questions Coal Monopolies and Contradictions in Report from Interstate Commerce Chairman * Rare 1870 Yale University Summer Boat Races Broadside * Susan B. Anthony Plaster Relief Medallion Copyrighted by Her Sister * Arthur Ashe’s United Negro College Fund Benefit Silver Bowl Trophy * Golda Meir Stresses the Need to Settle New Immigrants * “John Bull and the Baltimoreans” Lampooning British Defeat at Fort McHenry in Baltimore Following their Earlier Success at Alexandria * President Washington Approves Establishment of Mint and Issues First Veto * Ben-Gurion Attempts to Convince the Israeli Government to Attack Jordan, After Jordan Violated the Cease-fire Ending the Six Day War * Boston Newspaper Publishes Former Governor Hutchinson’s Letters * Bronze Bas Relief Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt: “Aggressive fighting for the right is the greatest sport the world affords” * Inventor Thomas A. Edison Responds to His Son’s Note About a Speaking Request * Golda Meir Invites an American Semiconductor Pioneer to an Israeli Economic Conference * Madison’s Optimistic First Message to Congress: A Prelude to the War of 1812 * Adams Defends U.S. Constitution, First French Edition * Early Printing of a Bill to Establish the Treasury Department * FDR Signed Engraving of White House Bound in The Democratic Book 1936 * Harry Hines Woodring Political Archives and Related Material * Congressmen Who Signed Thirteenth Amendment Abolishing Slavery * Anticipating Prohibition Repeal * Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Doll * Eleanor Roosevelt Asks Pennsylvania Educator to Serve as Chair of Local Women’s Crusade * Ben-Gurion Calls for a Jerusalem Home for the Bible Society: “every spiritual idea, for it to exist and exert influence, needs a physical structure, too, a central home…” * Lucy Stone Thanks Suffragist Who Later Led Effort for Women’s Suffrage in Hawaii for Donation * A Ruff-Necked Hummingbird by Audubon * Masonic Apron, Neck Sash & Medal of U.S. Mint - California Gold Refiner James Booth, with a Lithograph of Him * N.Y. “Sons of Freedom” Pull Down Statue of King George III * Calvin Coolidge Appoints Trustee of the National Training School for Girls * Harvard’s 1791 Graduating Students and Theses, Dedicated to Governor John Hancock and Lieutenant Governor Samuel Adams * Honoring Washington and Quoting His Farewell Address (Drafted by Hamilton) * Pennsylvania Deputy Governor Urges General Assembly to Resist French Expansion in North America in Early Stages of the French and Indian War * Lucy Stone Promotes Bazaar to Suffragist Who Later Led Effort for Women’s Suffrage in Hawaii * New York Times Carriers’ Address Reviews the Year 1863 in Bad Verse, Including Freeing of Russia’s Serfs, and the Battle of Gettysburg * Eleanor Roosevelt Thanks Former State Senator for Article to Assist Women in Monitoring Polling Places * Hillary Clinton Thanks Doctor for Policy Change to Allow Fathers to Be in Delivery Room for Caesarean Sections * John Marshall’s “Life of George Washington” and Companion Atlas with Hand-colored Maps * President Franklin D. Roosevelt Thanks for a “Heartening” Telegram Received September 27, While FDR was Trying to Prevent Hitler from Starting War * Rich 1845 Letter on the State of American Art to Hudson River Artist Jasper Cropsey * Senator Sprague of Rhode Island Writes About Fascinating Debates in Congress Involving Freedom for the Families of African American Recruits and the Limits of Free Speech in the Senate * Gerald Ford Defends His Early Commitment to Civil Rights * Picasso Anti-War Image Used to Promote Vietnam War Protest * 16 x 20 Inch Photograph of St. Augustine, Florida, African American Cart Driver * Future Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo: “I am alone in the world now.” * Anthony C. McAuliffe Writes Amidst Tests of Atomic Bombs at Bikini Atoll in 1946 * Hoover Tells a Key Aide that Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping Occupies FBI in New York * Mercury Astronaut Gordon Cooper’s Signed “Bioscience Data Plan” for Conducting Vital Biomedical Research on the Impact of Space Flight on the Human Body * Ohio Reformers Use Rhode Island’s Dorr Rebellion to Justify Their Own Behavior * 1790 Massachusetts Newspaper Discussing Nantucket Whalers * Elmer W. Henderson – Who Defeated Railroad Dining Car Segregation – Congratulates African American Inventor for American Institute of Chemists Award * Mark Hopkins, Famed Educator and the Longest Serving President of Williams College, Preparing to Lecture at the Smithsonian Institute * Future Hero of Little Round Top Advises a Friend on Getting a Leave of Absence * A Harlequin Duck by Audubon * Alex Haley Signed Check * New England Factory Life * Rebel Deserters Coming within the Union Lines * Advertisement for Temperance Restaurant in New York City * Seesaw - Gloucester, MA - Drawn by Winslow Homer * The Statue of Liberty * Christmas Presents * Edwin M. Stanton Portrait, Based on a Photograph by Matthew Brady * The Army of the Potomac Arriving at Yorktown from Williamsburg * (On Hold) The U.S. Constitution – Very Rare Printing on the Second Day of Publication -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER PRINTS OFFERINGS * Rare Important Declaration of Independence Linen Handkerchief * George Washington: Rare 1777 Revolutionary War Hand Colored Engraving * Miscegenation, or the Millennium of Abolitionism – Stirring Fear of Interracial Marriage Before 1864 Presidential Election More... * Large 1801 Folio Engraving of Thomas Jefferson as New President * Currier & Ives Cartoon Mocks Stephen Douglas for Campaigning in 1860 * Rare 1870 Yale University Summer Boat Races Broadside * “Poverty or Prosperity?” McKinley & Hobart 1896 Presidential Campaign Rare Huge Jugate Poster * “John Bull and the Baltimoreans” Lampooning British Defeat at Fort McHenry in Baltimore Following their Earlier Success at Alexandria * “Copperheads Vigorously Prosecuting Peace: Is it the Peace YOU Want?” * Abraham Lincoln: Large 1861 Inauguration Chromolithograph * Illustrator Frank Leslie Publishes Fanciful Grand Reception of Civil War Notables as a Subscription Premium * Congressmen Who Signed Thirteenth Amendment Abolishing Slavery * Uncle Tom’s Cabin Advertised by Local Maine Drama Club * A Ruff-Necked Hummingbird by Audubon * N.Y. “Sons of Freedom” Pull Down Statue of King George III * Picasso Anti-War Image Used to Promote Vietnam War Protest * A Harlequin Duck by Audubon * New England Factory Life * The Statue of Liberty * Christmas Presents Vibrant Print of Fifteenth Amendment Celebrations Click to enlarge: Select an image: The colorful central image of this lithograph depicts a Black Zouave regiment on parade in Baltimore, Maryland, on May 19, 1870, to celebrate passage of the Fifteenth Amendment. Framing the central scene are vignettes and portraits of individuals important to the cause of African American men’s voting rights. Individuals pictured include Ulysses S. Grant, Frederick Douglass, Martin R. Delany (first U.S. Army African American field officer), Hiram R. Revels (first African American U.S. Senator), Schuyler Colfax, Abraham Lincoln, and John Brown. The portraits are interspersed with vignettes showing scenes of African Americans reading the Emancipation Proclamation, marrying, leading troops in battle, worshiping, voting, sitting in Congress, among other activities, with captions: “We till Our Own Fields; Education Will Prove the Equality of the Races; The ballot box is Open to Us; [Masonic scene]We Unite in the Bonds of Fellowship with the Whole Human Race; Liberty Protects the Marriage Alter; The Holy Ordinance of Religion are Free; Freedom Unites the Family Circle; We Will Protect our Country as it Defends our Rights; Our Charter of Rights is the Holy Scripture.” [FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT]. The Fifteenth Amendment, Celebrated May 19th 1870, hand-colored lithographic print. New York: Thomas Kelly, 1870. From original design by James C. Beard. 1 p., 30 x 24 in. Inventory #27755 Price: $6,500 Add to Cart Ask About This Item Add to Favorites Historic Background The 15th Amendment, passed by Congress in 1869, and ratified by the requisite number of states on February 3, 1870, stated that “the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,” and gave Congress an enforcement mechanism. It was the last of the Reconstruction amendments passed by the Republican Congress after the Civil War to give citizenship to newly freed African Americans. The BaltimoreSun newspaper described the parade on May 19 as an “Imposing Procession of Civil, Military, Trade and Beneficial Associations.” Both black and white spectators lined the streets to view the grand procession. A chariot drawn by four horses led the procession and carried a large bell that was “kept continually sounding” and a banner proclaiming, “Ring out the old, ring in the new, ring out the false, ring in the true.” Following the chariot were the Knights Templar of Baltimore and Washington, the Philadelphia Cornet Band, and detachments of infantry and cavalry. Carriages carrying a procession of distinguished guests and speakers included famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass. The parade also included various social organizations, fire departments, bands, clubs, schools, work associations, political societies, and more from Baltimore, Washington, and Philadelphia, many dressed in bright colors and carrying banners and flags. A twenty-foot full-rigged ship sits in the background of the center scene of the print, which the BaltimoreSun’s article mentioned accompanied the Caulkers’ and Live Oak Association and was drawn by four horses. A wagon carried an operating printing press that was printing a handbill during the parade, which contained the text of the Fifteenth Amendment and an advertisement for the Freedmen’s Savings Bank. The procession began at 11 a.m., and the end of it did not reach Monument Square until 4 p.m. At Monument Square, the speaker’s stand collapsed, but there were no serious injuries, and they changed to the balcony of the Gilmor House on the other side of the square. Organizers read letters from Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts and William Lloyd Garrison of New York. Speakers included African American attorney from Ohio John M. Langston, U.S. Postmaster General John Creswell from Maryland, Frederick Douglass, and U.S. Senator Frederick A. Sawyer of South Carolina. James Carter Beard (1837-1913) was born in Cincinnati, and spent his childhood in Covington, Kentucky. Admitted to the bar in 1861, Beard practiced for only a short time. He married Martha J. Bray of Indiana in December 1862. He studied law, but decided on a career as an illustrator. He specialized in pictures of animals and worked as a staff artist for D. Appleton & Company and for Charles Scribner’s Sons. He was the author and illustrator of Little Workers (1878), Curious Homes and Their Tenants (1897), and Billy Possum (1909). By 1910, he lived in New Orleans, Louisiana. His brother Daniel C. Beard and sisters Adelia Belle Beard and Lina Beard were also illustrators. Thomas Kelly (1836-1914) was born in Ireland and immigrated to Philadelphia in the 1850s. In 1859, he married Margret T. Inglis (1835-1911), who was born in Scotland. They had eleven children. He worked with his father John Kelly (1810-1872) in Philadelphia before establishing his own publishing firm in New York City in 1863. Kelly created views of all areas of American life and was known for strong coloring and vivid compositions. In 1865, he published two lithographs: President Lincoln and His Cabinet and Jefferson Davis and His Cabinet for sale to both northern and southern customers. Reference:Reilly, American Political Prints 1870-4. Condition:vertical folds, 6-inch repaired tear extending into left part of image, edge wear reinforced in spots on verso. Large margins. Add to Cart Ask About This Item Add to Favorites Lincoln © 2024 Seth Kaller, Inc. • Historical Documents • Legacy Collections Telephone (914) 289-1776 E-mail: info@sethkaller.com Accessibility ShareThis Copy and Paste