Search

Back to top

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Subjects Presidents--United States--Portraits. Remove constraint Subjects: Presidents--United States--Portraits.
Number of results to display per page
View results as:

Search Results

Collection

John Doggett & Co. subscription books, 1825-1961

1 box

The John Doggett & Co. subscription books contain the signatures of 92 subscribers to The American Kings lithograph set. Also included are several sketches produced by John Doggett Cobb circa 1906; an 1825 contract between Jonathan Cobb and John Doggett & Co. for the sale of the lithograph set; and notes and clippings from Edward Morrill, the rare book dealer who purchased the subscription books in 1944.

The John Doggett & Co. subscription books are two volumes containing the signatures of 92 subscribers to The American Kings lithograph set. A folded broadside advertisement for the print series is on the inside front cover of each volume. Also included are several sketches mainly produced by John Doggett Cobb; an 1825 contract between Jonathan Cobb and John Doggett & Co. for the sale of the lithograph set; and notes and clippings from Edward Morrill, the rare book dealer who purchased the subscription books in 1944.

The two volumes contain the signatures of 92 men mostly from eastern Massachusetts. There are a total of 174 signatures between the two volumes, 80 of these signatures appear in both volumes.

In each volume the first set of pages is divided into two columns. In volume one signatures are present in both columns, whereas in volume two the second column lists the city names where the signatories lived. For a full list of signatories, please see our Signatories index.

In addition to the subscription signatures both volumes also contain numerous sketches, including charcoal, colored pencil and watercolor illustrations. The sketches present in volume one are attributed to John Doggett Cobb circa 1906 and include charcoal drawings of medieval English abbeys such as Fountains Abby, St. Joseph’s Chapel, Glastonbury Abbey, Netly Abbey, Whitby Abbey and Lindisfarne Prior. All of these sketches appear to have been based on stereographic images. There are several more charcoal drawings that may have also been produced by Cobb of Wallingford Bridge, Roundham Bridge, the Bablock Hythe Ferry, Folly Bridge, Newbridge, Nuneham Park, Clifton Hampden and Mapledurham Woods. Most of these drawings contain notations for where to add specific colors in future depictions. Both the Wallingford Bridge and Mapledurham Woods sketches have been colored with pencil. There are also several watercolor and charcoal illustrations of unconfirmed authorship that are present in volume two, including drawings of natural scenery, a castle, a wagon train, a campfire overlooking a town, and what appears to be a busy seaport.

This collection also includes a handwritten agreement dated November 1, 1825, regarding the production of the prints arranged between John Doggett & Co. and Johnathon Holmes Cobb. The contract states that Doggett would provide Cobb with 1000 sets of The American Kings while Cobb would garner the subscriptions and gain all of the profits after paying Doggett $5,000. There is also a clause outlining what would happen if too few sets were sold.

Also contained in the collection is a note written on an envelope from the Hotel Lexington in New York City discussing the purchase price of the subscription books and the rarity of the broadsides; a description of the collection and its provenance written on the front of a mailing envelope addressed to Edward Morrill from the New York Public Library; a 1934 exhibition guide of the First National Bank of Boston highlighting The American Kings painted portrait series; a newspaper clipping ca. 1863 regarding Marquis de Lafayette’s departure from the United States in 1825; and a 1930 Boston Evening Transcript article about The American Kings portraits on view at the Old Colony Trust in Boston.

Collection

Wilhelm Hasselbach Chicago Fire photograph album, 1871-1917 (majority within 1871-1872)

1 volume

This album, compiled by Wilhelm Hasselbach in 1871, contains photographs of Chicago buildings before and after the Great Fire of 1871, as well as commercial illustrations of buildings and landmarks in Germany and Switzerland, and photographic portraits of women.

Wilhlem Hasselbach, a German druggist living in Chicago, Illinois, compiled this album (24cm x 20cm) in 1871 and 1872. The album has green pebbled leather covers and a title, "Scrap Book," appears in a stylized gold design on the front. Photographs and commercial illustrations are pasted directly onto the book's colored pages. Hasselbach first inscribed the volume in Chicago in November 1871; a second note on the same page (written in German) is dated in Munich on September 16, 1894. Three items are laid into the volume's front cover: a Christmas card from the Northern Trust Company with a colored illustration of Michigan Avenue, Chicago, as it appeared in 1870 (printed after 1871); a pamphlet, "Chicago Since 1837" by Gordon Best (1917); and a card from S. D. Childs & Company (undated).

The first group of items includes a printed advertisement for a meeting of Chicago citizens to be held on October 9, 1871, and a photograph of a collage of portraits of United States presidents. These are followed by 62 photographs showing Chicago buildings and street scenes before and after the Great Chicago Fire, including pictures of commercial and municipal structures, a factory, and churches. One page has a small manuscript map showing the location of Bodemann & Hasselbach's drugstore and several other businesses at the intersection of State Street and Harrison Street. The Chicago pictures are followed by groups of commercial engravings and other illustrations depicting prominent buildings and landmarks in Berlin, Germany; Dresden, Germany; Zurich, Switzerland; and other locales, as well as a painting of Germania and a photograph of a collage of small portraits of German royalty and generals arrayed on an iron cross (around 70 items total). The final items are clippings with a picture of a dog who survived under a pile of rubble for over a day during the Great Chicago Fire and an advertisement for a secure bank vault and safe deposit boxes. Nine portraits are pasted into the album's final pages, including one of a well-dressed man and eight of unidentified women.