A RARE 1864 CAMPAIGN BROADSIDE FOR LINCOLN & JOHNSON
A RARE 1864 CAMPAIGN BROADSIDE FOR LINCOLN & JOHNSON

KING & BAIRD, 1864

Details
A RARE 1864 CAMPAIGN BROADSIDE FOR LINCOLN & JOHNSON
KING & BAIRD, 1864
[LINCOLN, Abraham (1809-1865).] National Union Ticket. For President, Abraham Lincoln. For Vice-President, Andrew Johnson. Electors...[26 names]. Philadelphia: King & Baird, Printers, [1864].
Broadside, 494 x 236mm printed in bold decorative display types in red and blue inks, a large woodcut of a 26-star American flag with tassels in top portion (minor marginal tears and light dampstains). Hinged, matted and framed.
Provenance
The Forbes Collection, Christie's New York, 2 November 2006, lot 83

Brought to you by

Peter Klarnet
Peter Klarnet Senior Specialist, Americana

Lot Essay

A rare 1864 campaign broadside listing Philadelphia's Republican electors for the key 1864 Presidential election.

It was widely accepted that the electoral votes in three states—Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania—were absolutely critical to Lincoln's bid for a second term. In the balloting on 11 October, all three states, by significant margins, went for the Lincoln-Johnson ticket. Henry Raymond of the New York Times commented—perhaps without undue exaggeration that "Tuesday's silent battle of voters has decided the destiny of the Republic." (15 October 1864, p. 4). When the balloting was finally completed and tallied, Lincoln had won re-election, garnering 212 electoral votes to McClellan's meager 21. As a result, Raymond declared, "Henceforth, 'Union and Liberty' for all classes and races, are to reign over this continent forever." (Ibid.)

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