Sell Your William Williston Heartsill Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days for up to Nearly $50,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your William Williston Heartsill Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
Sell Your William Williston Heartsill Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days
Below is a recent realized price for a copy of Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days by William Williston Heartsill. We at Nate D. Sanders Auctions can obtain up to this amount or more for you:
William Williston Heartsill Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days. Sold for nearly $50,000.
Here are some recent items that our auction house, Nate D. Sanders (http://www.NateDSanders.com) has sold:
200+ Letters With Exceptional & Relentless Battle Content From WIA Soldier Who Fought at Antietam, Cold Harbor & the Siege of Petersburg
Really exceptional and large Civil War archive of 208 letters by 1st Lieutenant William Gibson of the Purnell Legion Maryland Infantry, Co. A, who was wounded at the Battle of Globe Tavern during the Petersburg Siege. Lot also includes four war-dated and post-war photographs of Gibon. Gibson writes to his wife during his three year enlistment, with interesting and detailed battle content, most notably at Antietam, Cold Harbor, and the entire Siege of Petersburg, as well as at Harper’s Ferry, Cedar Mountain, Catlett’s Station and Chantilly, in addition to colorful content regarding his regiment and locals he encountered, including sharpshooting secesh women. Sold for $38,000.
31st Texas Civil War Letters of Texas Cavalry 60+ Letter Lot
Excellent 60+ Civil War letters lot from Thomas W. Johnson of Hawpe’s Regiment, the 31st Texas Cavalry, Co. I. Beginning in October 1862 just after his enlistment, Johnson writes over 60 letters to his wife in Weston, Collin County Texas, until his death in November 1864. Many letters contain vivid battle content, describing the fighting at Stirling’s Plantation, Fort DeRussy, Bayou de Glaise, Mansura, Vidalia and Harrisonburg. In a letter just after the Battle of Stirling’s Plantation, Johnson writes of the battle, and the spoils of war: “…we have had a fight since I wrote to you which I will give a brief description of. Last Monday evening to day being Saturday, in the evening we left here & went up to the ferry about one mile from here & crossed in the night that is the Atchafalaya & camped on the other side from here. We had cooked two days rations & put in our haversacks & had one blanket a piece. The wagons did not cross. There was one battery crossed over, commanded by Col Sims…blacks Battallion part of Gen Greens Cavalry dismounted…We all crossed…It rained a good deal that night & nearly all next day.” Letters are in very good condition, very readable with only light soiling and toning to most. Sold for $27,500.
200+ Letter Lot by Soldier in the 76th Illinois Infantry — With Battle Content From Vicksburg, Jackson & Fort Blakely: “…it Seems Like A hard thing to Shoot A Man But when you Are Shot At All you think of is to Shoot. Well i Shot Sixty four times during the Battle…when we were Retreating there was one officer that was urging on his Men And Some of our Boys Caled to Me Shoot him. Well i Stoped turned And fired And he went head formost out of his Saddle…”
Large lot of 201 letters by Henry B. Ingalls of the 76th Illinois Infantry, Co. B, who served from 1862-1865, diligently reporting the war to his wife and children back home. Stationed with General Grant for the latter part of 1862 and 1863, Ingalls writes most notably of skimishes throughout Mississippi, culminating in the Siege of Vicksburg, as well as fighting with Sherman’s army in the latter half of 1863-64. The 76th Illinois also fought heavily in one of the last battles of the Civil War, just days before the armistice, at the Battle of Fort Blakeley, where they lost over 50 men in killed and wounded.
Lot is accompanied by a post-war kepi and shot bag, with Ingalls’ initials “H I” stitched in the lining of the kepi. Letters are very legible with most running 3-4 pages, and with covers for approximately half. Overall in very good condition. A fascinating lot, with an unusually prodigious number of Illinois Civil War Letters covering Ingalls’ entire service in the war. Sold for $25,000.
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