Sell Your John Hunt Morgan Autograph for up to $10,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE APPRAISAL. To appraise, auction, buy, consign or sell your Confederate General John Hunt Morgan autograph that is for sale for up to $10,000 or more, please email [email protected] or contact Nate D. Sanders at (310) 440-2982. We will also grant you a high reserve which no other auction house will let you do.
Sell Your John Hunt Morgan Autograph
Here is a John Hunt Morgan autograph actual price realized and we can get up to this price for you or more at our Nate D. Sanders Auction House. Please phone or email [email protected] to appraise, auction, buy, consign or sell your original John Hunt Morgan autograph:
An original John Hunt Morgan autograph, on a letter from 1863, sold for almost $10,000
Consign your John Hunt Morgan autograph that is for sale today. Please email [email protected] to sell your John Hunt Morgan autograph.
Similar Items Sold
At Nate D. Sanders Auctions we sold the following Confederate General’s autographs, among others:
Civil War Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard autograph manuscript signed, leaving his Army of the Potomac, the first established Army of the Confederacy whom Beauregard — the Confederacy’s first Brigadier General — led at First Bull Run. Having been transferred to the Army of the Tennessee, Beauregard writes from “Head Quarters 1st Corps A of P Near Centreville” on 30 January 1862: “…You are now undergoing the severest trial of a soldier’s life…My faith in your patriotism, your devotion and determination, and in your high soldierly qualities is so great, that I shall rest assured you will pass through the ordeal resolutely…Still, I cannot quit you without…deep anxiety, in the moment of our country’s trials and dangers…[T]his is no time for the army of the Potomac – the men of Manassas – to stack their arms and quit…To the army of Shenandoah, I desire to return my thanks for their assistance, last July, their timely, decisive arrival…Those…not so fortunate as yet to have been with us in conflict with our enemy, I leave with all confidence that on occasion they will show themselves fit comrades for the men of Manassas, Bull Run, and Ball’s Bluff…” G.T. Beauregard / Gen’l Com’dg”. 2pp. measures 8″ x 12.5″. Foxing, toning minor separation at folds and paper loss to corners. One of the best P.G.T. Beauregard autograph items one could hope to own. Very good condition. Sold for $12,500.
Auction your John Hunt Morgan autograph that is for sale today. Please email [email protected] to sell your John Hunt Morgan autograph.
Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston autograph letter signed ”J.E. Johnston”, dated 16 May 1865 from Charlotte, North Carolina, written soon after being released on parole by the Union Army. Also with three endorsements signed by Ulysses S. Grant, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton and General John Schofield. Letter is addressed to General Schofield, just two weeks after Johnston surrendered his Army of Tennessee and still active rebel troops. After both parties agreed to military surrender, Johnston and Schofield negotiated supplementary terms, including his soldiers’ release, and here asks permission to travel to Canada. Reads in part: ”…As soon as the terms of ‘the convention’ are executed in Georgia & Florida, I wish to go to St. Catherine’s Springs, Canada. Will you be so kind as to inform me if I will be permitted to travel directly from Virginia to that point? Most respectfully / Your obt sevt / J.E. Johnston”. General Schofield endorses the letter on 16 May, the same day, ”Respectfully refered [sic] to Lt. Gen. Grant. J M Schofield Maj Genl.” Grant then endorses the letter on 22 May: ”I am very much in favor of granting Gen. Johnston’s request and if authorized will telegraph the authority at once. U. S. Grant Lt. Gen.” Lastly, Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton seeks approval from President Johnson: ”Submitted to the President who directs that the permission asked by General Johnson [sic] be granted with the condition that he does not return to the United States without leave of the President. Edwin M Stanton Sec of War.” Letter on one page measures 8” x 6.25”, matted with a portrait of Johnston to an overall size of 12.5” x 18.25”. Light toning and folds throughout; very good to near fine. A U.S. Grant autograph is rare dated during the Civil War or directly relates to the Civil War as this one does. Sold for $12,500.
Civil War Document Signed by Generals Johnston and Grant, & War Secretary Stanton — Johnston Negotiates His Parole Terms After Surrendering & Grant Agrees, ”…I am very much in favor…”
Consign your John Hunt Morgan autograph that is for sale today. Please email [email protected] to sell your John Hunt Morgan autograph.
NO OBLIGATION, FREE VALUATION. To appraise, auction, buy, consign or sell your John Hunt Morgan autograph that is for sale for up to $10,000 or more, please email [email protected] or contact Nate D. Sanders at (310) 440-2982. We will also grant you a high reserve which no other auction house will let you do.
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