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More Rare and Unusual Americana from David Lesser Antiquarian Books

Catalogue 93 of Rare Americana from David Lesser.


By Michael Stillman

David M. Lesser Fine Antiquarian Books
has issued their 93rd catalogue of Rare Americana. It fits right in the Lesser mold, catalogues of mainly pamphlets and other unusual American works predominately from the 18th and 19th century. These are mostly concerned with the immediate issues of the day, rather than thorough detailed historical works. The shorter, pamphlet form allowed for quick comment on current events. Here you will find many political works, some concerning issues great, others small and forgotten. Religious leaders thunder over the doctrinal controversies of the day, many of little concern anymore. There are numerous legal arguments, accounts of trials, business propositions, especially concerning railroads, arguments pro and con over slavery and women's rights, even a few medical works, or perhaps quackery works might be more descriptive. Lesser's catalogues are informative and entertaining, and offer a wealth of material for your Americana collection. Here are just a few of these uncommon items.

America was more of an egalitarian society in its earlier days, a leftover rebellion against the nobility of its former colonial masters. Some of that spirit can be seen in organizations such as the one described in the Catalogue of the Anti-Secret Confederation. Such groups were common in America in the first half of the 19th century, there once having been an entire political party dedicated to opposing the Masons. The confederation described in this catalogue was formed of anti-secret societies at numerous colleges in the Northeast. They claim, "Secret Societies are calculated to destroy the harmony of College, to create distinctions not founded on merit..." Item 4, published in 1853. Priced at $375.

Henry Clay was one of the senate's greatest orators, whose attempts to bring various sides together earned him the sobriquet the "Great Compromiser." His talents were put to their greatest test after the Mexican War, when the North and South began rapidly to pull apart, and the Union started to unravel. Clay led the Senate to passage of the Compromise of 1850, actually a series of compromises that, at the time, seemed to save the Union. He died two years later, his Whig political party in disarray, but the Union apparently saved. By 1856, the compromises had virtually disintegrated while the Whigs, who had won the presidency as recently as 1848, ceased to exist. That left his political opponents, the Democrats, the new anti-immigrant American (Know-Nothing) Party, and the newly formed Northern party the Republicans to battle for the presidency. Were he still alive, who would the old Whig compromiser have supported? We will never know, though many, especially northern Whigs like Abraham Lincoln, moved to the Republicans. Item 23 is a Letter from the Hon. James B. Clay, published in 1856. James was Henry Clay's loyal son, so it is interesting to see how he confronted this choice. From the three, Clay immediately eliminates Republican John Fremont, saying the Republicans will "destroy the glorious Union under which I was born and lived." The other two, Know-Nothing Millard Fillmore and Democrat James Buchanan, are "a choice of evils," though a lesser evil than Fremont.

More Rare and Unusual Americana from David Lesser Antiquarian Books

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Ultimately, he chooses Democrat Buchanan, though he "was the political enemy and the vilifier of my father." He explains, "I loved my father better than I loved any mortal man, but I love my country more." Clay would be elected to Congress later that year as a Democrat, be offered but decline a ministerial post by President Buchanan, attend the Peace Convention of 1861 in Washington, which unsuccessfully attempted to reach a compromise between North and South, and ultimately support the Confederacy. However, he became too ill to militarily assist the Confederacy and died before the war was over. We don't know what Henry Clay would have done had he lived another decade, but it is interesting to see the route chosen by his son. $250.

Speaking of the Know-Nothings, in 1856 they railed against foreigners in this pamphlet, The Foreign German Vote. They encouraged Americans to vote for Know-Nothing candidate Fillmore because the Democrats relied on "Irish Catholic influence," while the Republicans courted "German foreigners." The pamphlet states that Germans do not support Republican Fremont the way native born citizens do. "They support him as Germans, not as American citizens." Whatever that means. Prejudice is nothing new. $350.

It would take almost a century and a half for the Supreme Court to come around to John A. Graham's point of view. Graham argues his legal point in The Report of Hiram Maxwell's Case, printed in 1823. Maxwell was accused of stealing a horse, and apparently "confessed" to the crime. In a distant forerunner of the Miranda warnings routinely given those charged with a crime today, Graham argues that confessions should not be taken from an accused "without first informing him of his legal rights, thereby protecting the ignorant innocent from being entrapped, or frightened into a confession that often deprives them of liberty, if not of life." The Supreme Court would finally make this the law of the land in 1966. Item 45. $375.

Dr. Andrew Stone offered cures for all types of diseases in 1868 in his The Most Wonderful Cures! Effected by the Newly-Discovered System of Electro-Vital Remedies and Treatment... Among those illnesses he could cure were pulmonary diseases, liver disorders, catarrh, dyspeptic consumption, bronchitis, epilepsy, female weaknesses, rheumatism, laryngitis, asthma, throat diseases, and scrofula. Medicine was much more effective back in 1868. Dr. Stone claimed to be the inventor of the pulmometer, which while it sounds like something a dentist would use, is actually a device to measure lung capacity. Item 104. $475.

David M. Lesser Fine Antiquarian Books may be found online at www.lesserbooks.com or reached by phone at 203-389-8111.