Description:

Lincoln Abraham 1809 - 1865 Newspaper issued three days after President Lincoln's assassination
The New York Daily Tribune newspaper, dated April 17, 1865 , 15.75" x 21". 8 pages. Expected folds, and accompanying creasing and edgewear/chipping to the outer edges, outside of margins. Separation at folds with slight paper loss. Light faded water stain throughout but overall amazingly well preserved.



From the 1840s through the 1860s The New York Daily Tribune was the dominant Whig Party and then Republican newspaper in the United States. The paper achieved a circulation of approximately 200,000 during the decade of the 1850s, making it the largest in New York City and perhaps the nation. TheTribune's editorials were widely read and helped shape national opinion.


A wonderful example of a newspaper printed within several days after the assassination and death of President Lincoln, and the assassination attempt on Seward. Spectacular reading bringing real-time insight to the period with an absolute eerie and bone chilling accounting of the evening and the events that ensued. Some of the salient excerpts include:


"Capt. McGowan's account of The Assassination.


… Friday April 14 1865, in company with a friend, I went to the Ford's theater. Arriving there just after the entrance of President Lincoln and the party accompanying him …The house was perfectly still, the large audience listening to the dialogue between "Florence Trenchard" and "May Meredith" when the sharp report of a pistol rang through the house. It was apparently fired behind the scenes on the right of the stage." Looking toward it and behind the Presidential box, while it startled all, it was evidently accepted by everyone in the theater as an introduction to some new passage … A moment after a man leaped from the front of the box directly down nine feet on the stage and ran rapidly across it, bare -headed, holding an unsheathed daggar in his right hand … the next moment confusion reigned supreme."


"The two Seward's remain the same. No hopes are entertained of Frederick's life. The frightful gashings of the Secretary would not of themselves result in his death … but the physicians all agree he exhibits wonderful vitality … His instant death was prevented by his providentially turning his head after the first stab"


Other excepts include details about "The Effect of the President's Death", and "The Last Hours Of The President", "The Assassin's Movements"


"The gloomiest day in our national history dawned upon us on Saturday morning and darke days have not been unfrequent during the last five years … the astounding news that President Lincoln had been basely assassinated by a desperate Rebel, while sitting, oblivious of danger, in a theater at Washington on Friday night, and that an assault with similar deadly intent, had been made a few mintues later upon Secretary Seward while lying helpless on his bed, shocked, mortified and exasperated the entire Northern people on Saturday…"


"Confidence may be felt that everything will go on as before…Just now there is a country to be saved…"


"The death of Mr. Lincoln will in no wise endanger the safety of the country or arrest the train of event snow in progress…"


"By a common impulse everything was closed and all business suspended"


Ordinary details of the last hours of President Lincoln are also described along with movement of Booth leading up to the assassination.


An outstanding, revealing newspaper which will absorb someone for hours of reading as an accounting of the events unfolded.

Accepted Forms of Payment:

American Express, MasterCard, Money Order / Cashiers Check, Paypal, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer

Shipping

Applicable shipping and handling charges will be added to the invoice. Shipping and handling costs are competitive as we maintain discounted contracts with FedEx. If you have any questions, contact University Archives prior to bidding. After payment has been made in full, University Archives will ship your purchase within 5 business days following receipt of full payment for item. We currently ship via FedEx but if your purchase is shipping to a P.O. Box, we ship via USPS. All items are insured. We ship from our offices in Westport, CT. We may opt to use a third party shipper for very fragile, bulky or oversized items. Items requiring third party shipping will be denoted in the item description. Packages shipped internationally will have full value declared on shipping form. International buyers will be responsible for any customs fees incurred.

Please remember that the buyer is responsible for all shipping costs from University Archives' offices in Westport, CT to the buyer's door. Please see full Terms and Conditions of Sale.

University Archives

You agree to pay a buyer's premium of 20% and any applicable taxes and shipping.

View full terms and conditions

Bid Increments
From: To: Increments:
$0 $99 $10
$100 $299 $20
$300 $499 $25
$500 $999 $50
$1,000 $1,999 $100
$2,000 $2,999 $200
$3,000 $4,999 $250
$5,000 $9,999 $500
$10,000 $19,999 $1,000
$20,000 $49,999 $2,500
$50,000 + $5,000