NEW YORK, NY.- Today in New York,
Sothebys auction of Alexander Hamilton: An Important Family Archive of Letters and Manuscripts achieved an outstanding total of $2,645,750, surpassing its pre-sale high estimate of $2.1 million. All 77 lots on offer representing hundreds of individual documents found buyers, marking a rare White Glove auction. Eleven lots broke the previous auction record for any document handwritten by Hamilton a record that had held since 2001*.
Viewed by thousands of visitors over the past week at Sothebys New York, the collection of letters and manuscripts by and relating to Alexander Hamilton drew a diverse audience: from political-science enthusiasts to theater lovers, newly-impassioned historians, and institutional collections even the company of Hamilton: An American Musical. This remarkable archive of highly-personal documents had descended through Hamiltons family for the last two centuries, with many of the manuscripts previously unknown to historians.
Selby Kiffer, Senior International Specialist for Sotheby's Books & Manuscripts, noted: We have been thrilled to be part of the cultural movement that has re-established this Founding Father's rightful place in history. The results of todays sale are an indicator not only of the tremendous public interest in Alexander Hamilton, but also of the appetite among both new and established collectors to own historical documents.
A highlight of todays auction was the document responsible for Alexander Hamiltons foray into the public sphere: Alexander Hamiltons Appointment as Aide-de-Camp to General George Washington from 1777, which sold for $212,500. This appointment jumpstarted Hamiltons political career, leading to subsequent positions as congressman, founder of the Bank of New York, member of the Constitutional convention and more.
The auction was led by A Previously Unrecorded Autograph Draft of Pacificus Essay No. VI, which achieved $262,500. One of the most important essays written by Alexander Hamilton, under the pen name Pacificus, Pacificus VI is particularly vital to the storyline of Hamilton as no manuscript copies of The Federalist Papers considered by many to be his most famous work survive.
FURTHER SALE HIGHLIGHTS
**All Achieving Multiples of Their Estimates**
Lot 1036: Philip Schuyler, A Group of 34 Autograph Letters Signed ("PH. Schuyler"), 17901804, to His Daughter Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton. Estimate $35/50,000. Sold for $125,000
Lot 1007: Alexander Hamilton, Autograph Letter Signed (AH) to Elizabeth Schuyler (My Dearest Girl); The Earliest Surviving Love Letter from Alexander Hamilton to His Future Wife. Estimate $40/60,000. Sold for $118,750
Lot 1040: Philip Schuyler, A Group of 17 Letters, 17931803, Addressed to His Son-in-Law, Alexander Hamilton. Estimate $30/50,000. Sold for $118,750
Lot 1016: Alexander Hamilton, Autograph Letter Signed (A Hamilton) to Elizabeth Hamilton, Announcing that the Army Is Preparing to Engage Cornwallis in Virginia. Estimate $30/50,000. Sold for $106,250
Lot 1043: Alexander Hamilton, Autograph Letter Signed (AH) To Angelica Schuyler Church, Sending And Requesting Family News. Estimate $6/8,000. Sold of $62,500
*The previous auction record for an Alexander Hamilton manuscript was $44,650, established at Christies New York in May 2001.