American Manuscripts & other Property from the Collection of Elsie and Philip Sang
American Manuscripts & other Property from the Collection of Elsie and Philip Sang
Property from the Collection of Elsie and Philip Sang
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October 14, 04:36 PM GMT
Estimation
1,000 - 1,500 USD
Description du lot
Description
Property from the Collection of Elsie and Philip Sang
WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT
TYPED LETTER SIGNED (WM H TAFT") AS TWENTY-SEVENTH PRESIDENT, TO JOHN WANAMAKER, WITH A LENGTHY AUTOGRAPH POSTSCRIPT
One page (8 7/8 x 6 7/8 in.; 223 x 175 mm) on a bifolium of blue-embossed White House letterhead, Washington, 28 October 1912, with original typed envelope; faint finger-soiling at edges, lightly creased at horizontal fold.
William Howard Taft was Theodore Roosevelt's Secretary of War and protégé, but when Teddy entered the 1912 presidential race as a third-party Progressive candidate, Taft's defeat was assured. Many voters in Taft's core constituency, fearful of a progressive Roosevelt presidency, choose to support Democrat Woodrow Wilson. Wilson handily beat Roosevelt in the Electoral College, 435 to 88; Taft, who carried only Vermont and Utah, finished with just 8.
Just eight days prior to the election, Taft sent a brief note of appreciation to John Wanamaker, Philadelphia's pioneering department-store merchant: "Thank you for your note of October 26th, and for the accompanying advance copy of your statement. I have noted it with appreciative interest."
Perhaps sensing that this typed missive was a little halfhearted—and perhaps also remembering that less than a year earlier he had dedicated the palatial Wanamaker Building—Taft appended an autograph postscript of greater length and feeling: "I have read what you say in the morning paper, I cannot conceive of any statement from any other source that will so rouse the business community as your favorable and illuminating statements."