Sell or Auction Your Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin for up to Nearly $5,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
Sell Your Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin
Below is a recent realized price for a Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin item. We at Nate D. Sanders Auctions can obtain up to this amount or more for you:
Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin. Sold for nearly $5,000.
Here are some items that our auction house, Nate D. Sanders (http://www.NateDSanders.com) has sold:
Rare Abraham Lincoln & Hannibal Hamlin 1860 Election Jugate — Leading Up to Their Victorious Win Which Set the Stage for the Civil War
Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin very scarce 1860 election jugate, depicting each candidate in side-by-side portrait engravings. Political jugates of the Republican nominees were distributed during the tumultuous days leading up to the election of 1860, as Americans wrestled with slavery and wondered how a new Administration would affect it. Portrait engravings of the candidates are printed on a card published by Henry F. Granger & Co. of Boston, Massachusetts. Jugate reads: “Republican Nominees. 1860.” With Lincoln and Hamlin’s portraits depicted as “President” and “Vice President” and “Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois” and “Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine” additionally printed. Jugate, measuring 4.25″ x 3.25″, has minor foxing and toning throughout, with each portrait faded and with a very tiny tear along bottom edge. Very good condition. Sold for $3,738.

Abraham Lincoln Signed CDV as President — John Hay Certifies Signature as Authentic on Verso
Exceptionally rare Abraham Lincoln signed carte-de-visite photograph, taken by Alexander Gardner in 1861 and signed as President. Signed ”A. Lincoln” below the seated portrait of Lincoln. John Hay, Lincoln’s private secretary, authenticates the signature upon the verso by writing, ”I certify that the President’s signature is genuine / John Hay”. With ”Brady’s National Portrait Gallery” backstamp. Measures 2.5” x 3.75”. Very good with some foxing and wear, but with a strong signature by Lincoln. With provenance from Profiles in History and with a COA from Charles Hamilton. Sold for $49,913.



Extremely scarce Abraham Lincoln & Hannibal Hamlin 1860 jugate campaign ribbon in silk, one of only a handful extant. Engraved by J.D. Lovett of New York, design features a split rail fence below the portraits and the phrase ”Free Territory for a Free People” above. Beautiful example measures 2.375” x 6.375”, in near fine condition.
Lot also includes two silk 1844 campaign ribbons for James K. Polk, featuring Polk’s portrait as ”Young Hickory of Tennessee”. Fraying to top and bottom edges, and light discoloration, Each measures 2.5” x 5”, in very good condition. Sold for $8,640.

Gorgeous and Rare Set of Abraham Lincoln Campaign Medallions — From Both 1860 & 1864 in Near Fine Condition
Very rare set of 1860 and 1864 campaign medallions from the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln. Each medallion features a gem ferrotype portrait of Lincoln on one side and that of his running mate on the verso — Hannibal Hamlin in 1860 and Andrew Johnson in 1864. All four images are unusually clear with excellent contrast and virtually no rust. A brass holder encircles the portraits, upon which is engraved the election year. The 1860 medallion additionally lists the candidate’s name; in 1864 it states “For President” and “For Vice President”. Both medallions have a clasp at the top to run a string through so that one could visually display his support for the Lincoln ticket. Each medallion measures 1″ in diameter and are housed together in the original green velvet lined case. A beautiful set, difficult to find so well preserved. Sold for $3,000.

Abraham Lincoln 1860 Campaign Ribbon With the Desirable “Cooper Union” Photographic Portrait
Abraham Lincoln campaign ribbon for the 1860 presidential election, featuring his photographic portrait taken by Mathew Brady during the session at Cooper Union, where Lincoln delivered the speech that catapulted him to national prominence. This ribbon is among the most desirable of Lincoln campaign mementos, also bearing Lincoln’s printed signature at bottom. Ribbon measures 2.5″ x 7.25″. Some soiling at edges and a few small spots of foxing, but Lincoln’s image is nearly defect free. Very good condition. Sold for $2,375.


Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson 1864 Electoral Ticket
Extremely rare “National Union Electoral Ticket” for the 1864 Presidential election. The National Union party was an offshoot of the Republican party, established specifically for the 1864 election in order to attract “War Democrats” and accommodate Vice Presidential candidate Andrew Johnson. It would be a one-term party. This ticket, used by a Rhode Island delegate at the party’s Baltimore convention, is a rare remembrance of its brief existence. Ticket measures 3″ x 4.25″. Light toning and foxing, else near fine. Sold for $1,903.

Alf Landon “Land On” Washington Presidential Button
A beautiful example of one of the most collectible Presidential campaign buttons, the 1.25″ Alf Landon “Land On” Washington button for his 1936 campaign. This clever design shows Landon in a plane (capitalizing on the popularity of aviation at the time) about to descend on Washington, DC. Pin measures 1.25″ in diameter, with none of the usual foxing typically found on these buttons. With fully intact celluloid, in near fine condition. This is one of only approximately 50 examples of this button known to exist. Sold for $2,000.

Consign your item at Nate D. Sanders Auctions. Send a description and images to us at [email protected].
George Washington “Long Live the President” Button
A memento from the very first Presidential inauguration in 1789, a George Washington coat button with George Washington’s initials, “GW” at center and “Long Live the President” encircling the rim. Measures 1.3125″ in diameter. Missing shank on reverse, some rubbing to letters and tarnishing to metal. Very good condition. Highlighted in Alberts’ “Record of American Uniform and Historical Buttons” as well as DeWitt’s “A Century of Campaign Buttons 1789-1889” as an important example of American campaign buttons. Sold for $810.

FREE ESTIMATE. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Lincoln Hamlin: Ferrotype Jugate Stickpin that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
