Description:

French Emperor Napoleon III advises Baring Bros. banker Russell Sturgis that the Empress will be making a private visit to England and Scotland and may be signing checks - so he has had the Empress sign her name on this letter

EMPEROR NAPOLEON III (1808-1873) Manuscript Letter Signed "Napoléon" as Emperor of France and "Eugénie" as Empress, 1 page, 5.25" x 8". St. Cloud, November 17, 1860. [To banker Russell Sturgis of Baring Bros., London] In French, translated. Blind embossed crowned "N" at top left. Minor soiling. Fine condition.

In full, "Messieurs, The Empress being obliged for her health to make the journey, she is going soon to England and Scotland. In case the sums that she took with her would not be sufficient, I handed over to her the book of Checks that you had given to me. Would you please settle all the ones that she would use. Even though the Empress is traveling incognito, she will sign her name on the checks, in accordance with her signature hereunder. Sincerely, Napoléon. Signature of the Empress / Eugénie." Manuscript Letter Signed "Napoléon" as Emperor of France and "Eugénie" as Empress, 1 page, 5.25" x 8". St. Cloud, November 17, 1860. [To banker Russell Sturgis of Baring Bros., London] In French, translated. Blind embossed crowned "N" at top left. Minor soiling. Fine condition.

In full, "Messieurs, The Empress being obliged for her health to make the journey, she is going soon to England and Scotland. In case the sums that she took with her would not be sufficient, I handed over to her the book of Checks that you had given to me. Would you please settle all the ones that she would use. Even though the Empress is traveling incognito, she will sign her name on the checks, in accordance with her signature hereunder. Sincerely, Napoléon. Signature of the Empress / Eugénie."

From The Cornwall Chronicle, Tasmania, Australia, February 2, 1861, THE EMPRESS EUGENIE'S VISIT (From the 'European Times'): "The visit of the Empress of the French to England, almost in the depth of winter, is a strange event, and one that has caused considerable surprise on both sides of the Channel. Various reasons have been assigned for this sudden appearance amongst us of the Empress Eugenie, but they are so conflicting and improbable that we attach but little importance to any of them. There are only two facts on which we can with certainty rely -- first, that the Empress lost her sister, to whom she was devotedly attached, during the journey which she made a couple of months back with the Emperor to Algeria, and that the news reached her suddenly and unexpectedly on her return home; and secondly, that she is now in England, or rather in Scotland, seeking, amid the scenery and historical associations of the northern part of the kingdom such consolation as she can find. Her arrival in London excited no interest, because it was not anticipated, and, although the official people must have known of the visit, they allowed the Empress to enjoy her privacy, and did not obtrude on her sorrow the forms and ceremonies of court etiquette. Her Majesty [Queen Victoria] it is declared, visits us in her private capacity…" A photocopy of the article is present.

From The Cornwall Chronicle, Tasmania, Australia, February 2, 1861, THE EMPRESS EUGENIE'S VISIT (From the 'European Times'): "The visit of the Empress of the French to England, almost in the depth of winter, is a strange event, and one that has caused considerable surprise on both sides of the Channel. Various reasons have been assigned for this sudden appearance amongst us of the Empress Eugenie, but they are so conflicting and improbable that we attach but little importance to any of them. There are only two facts on which we can with certainty rely -- first, that the Empress lost her sister, to whom she was devotedly attached, during the journey which she made a couple of months back with the Emperor to Algeria, and that the news reached her suddenly and unexpectedly on her return home; and secondly, that she is now in England, or rather in Scotland, seeking, amid the scenery and historical associations of the northern part of the kingdom such consolation as she can find. Her arrival in London excited no interest, because it was not anticipated, and, although the official people must have known of the visit, they allowed the Empress to enjoy her privacy, and did not obtrude on her sorrow the forms and ceremonies of court etiquette. Her Majesty [Queen Victoria] it is declared, visits us in her private capacity…" A photocopy of the article is present.

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