Description:

Lincoln Abraham 1809 - 1865 Newspaper issued five days after President Lincoln's assassination
The New York Daily Tribunenewspaper, dated April 19, 1865, 15.75" x 21", 8 pages. Expected folds, and accompanying creasing and edgewear to the outer edges outside of margins. Separation at folds with slight paper loss. Slightly stained 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. The Tribune's editorials were widely read and helped shape national opinion.


A wonderful example of a newspaper printed within just a days after assassination and death of President Lincoln. Spectacular reading bringing real-time insight to the period. Some of the salient excerpts include:


"Washington Tuesday, April 18 1865


At an early hour this morning Pennsylvania Ave was thronged with people of both sexes, white and black, pouring toward the White House in order to vail themselves of the privilege of beholding for the last time the remains of the Nations former chief.


The city-which, ever since the assassination, has been darkened with funeral decorations-still retained a mournful aspect; both citizens and soldiers generally wore badges of crape, and as the procession waited for admission to the western ave leading to the White House, the minute-guns at long intervals boomed in respect to the memory of the sixteenth President. …"


The newspaper includes a wonderful direct quote from a black woman who had brought her young grandchild to the procession saying "I wants dis little child chile to see de man who made her free." and "Truly de good Lord has opened the eyes of this nation', says another"


"As the procession slowly moved torough [sic] the entrance of the Presidential Mansion to the East room, where lay the body, the scene was one of the greatest solemnity. Many an eye was wet with tears from both sexes and a stranger to the circumstances might have easily imagined as the crowd file by on either side of the coffin, every person a near relative of the deceased …"


An outstanding, revealing newspaper which will absorb someone for hours of reading.

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