President Lincoln discharges two Confederate prisoners two conscripted confederate soldiers asking
LINCOLN, ABRAHAM
Autograph endorsement signed. [Washington:] 10 February 1865. Five lines in ink in Lincoln's hand reading "Let these two men/take the oath/of Dec. 8. 1863 & be/discharged/A. Lincon/Feb. 10. 1865." The endorsement penned on the verso of a letter dated February 8th, 1865, a petition by John Dougherty seeking the release of two prisoners "conscripted into the Rebel service." 8 x 5 inches (19 x 13 cm). A blank area of the second leaf below the endorsement replaced with similar lined paper. Provenance: American Art Galleries, 10 November 1932, lot 67, accompanied by a letter.
President Lincoln's endorsement and signature on a discharge document dated about two months before his assassination. The endorsement is written on the verso of a petition on behalf of two conscripted Confederate soldiers, as was Lincoln's practice. The letter is written from a man who visited Washington in an attempt to meet with President Lincoln personally but was unable to do so. While the text of the petition is difficult to make out in its entirety, the prisoners, William A. Busby (who was imprisoned at Camp Morton) and C. Dozier (who was at Rock Island), apparently were captured after escaping the front lines, and the writer of the letter suggests they take the required oath as mentioned by Lincoln in his note.
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LINCOLN, ABRAHAM
Autograph endorsement signed. [Washington:] 10 February 1865. Five lines in ink in Lincoln's hand reading "Let these two men/take the oath/of Dec. 8. 1863 & be/discharged/A. Lincon/Feb. 10. 1865." The endorsement penned on the verso of a letter dated February 8th, 1865, a petition by John Dougherty seeking the release of two prisoners "conscripted into the Rebel service." 8 x 5 inches (19 x 13 cm). A blank area of the second leaf below the endorsement replaced with similar lined paper. Provenance: American Art Galleries, 10 November 1932, lot 67, accompanied by a letter.
President Lincoln's endorsement and signature on a discharge document dated about two months before his assassination. The endorsement is written on the verso of a petition on behalf of two conscripted Confederate soldiers, as was Lincoln's practice. The letter is written from a man who visited Washington in an attempt to meet with President Lincoln personally but was unable to do so. While the text of the petition is difficult to make out in its entirety, the prisoners, William A. Busby (who was imprisoned at Camp Morton) and C. Dozier (who was at Rock Island), apparently were captured after escaping the front lines, and the writer of the letter suggests they take the required oath as mentioned by Lincoln in his note.
Condition Report: No condition report? Click below to request one. *Any condition statement is given as a courtesy to a client, is an opinion and should not be treated as a statement of fact and Doyle New York shall have no responsibility for any error or omission. Please contact the specialist department to request further information or additional images that may be available.Request a condition report