Lot 4
[African-Americana] [Fifteenth Amendment] The Result of the Fifteenth Amendment... Hand-Colored Lithograph
Sale 2107 - Collections of an Only Child: Seventy Years a Bibliophile, the Library of Justin G. Schiller
Dec 5, 2024
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Live / New York
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Lot Description
[African-Americana] [Fifteenth Amendment] The Result of the Fifteenth Amendment, And the Rise and Progress of the African Race in America and its final Accomplishment, and Celebration on May 19th A.D. 1870.
Baltimore: Metcalf & Clark, 1870. Hand-colored lithograph, 20 3/4 x 27 in. (528 x 686 mm). Depicting a celebration of the ratification of the 15th Amendment. Reilly, American Political Prints 1766-1876, 1870-2; McCauley, Maryland Historical Prints, E109
A jubilant celebration for American Civil Rights after the passage of the 15th Amendment, this print depicts a parade held in Mount Vernon Place in Baltimore, Maryland, on May 19, 1870. The parade is comprised of Black Zouaves, some on horseback, striding down Monument Street from the Washington Monument in Baltimore, as the sidewalks are lined with African American onlookers. Along the margins are a series of vignettes depicting key figures such as Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner, John Brown, Presidents Lincoln and Grant, and Frederick Douglass.
The Fifteenth Amendment, enacted on March 30, 1870, extended suffrage to Black men in the United States. The last of the Reconstruction Amendments, it cemented the social gains won at great human cost in the Civil War by stating: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude."
There are two versions of this print from Metcalf & Clark: a black and white version and hand-colored versions such as this. OCLC records only one copy, at AAS; other copies are held by the Library of Congress, the National Portrait Gallery, the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore, and the Leventhal Center at the Boston Public Library.
This lot is located in Philadelphia.
Provenance
From the collection of Justin G. Schiller
Condition Report
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