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George H. Williams’ Scrapbook w/ 100s of Political Cartoons/ Civil War - 1860s

George H. Williams’ Scrapbook w/ 100s of Political Cartoons/ Civil War - 1860s

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George H. Williams’ Scrapbook w/ 100s of Political Cartoons/ Civil War - 1860s

by Various Authors and Artists; Williams, George Henry [Compiler]

  • Used
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Volume Poor; Contents Very Good or better/[No Dust Jacket]
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Winston Salem, North Carolina, United States
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About This Item

[No Place Stated]: Various Authors and Artists, [No Date Known]. First Edition. Disbound. Volume Poor; Contents Very Good or better/[No Dust Jacket]. George Henry Williams (1823-1910), was an attorney-general and senator from Oregon who became a lawyer in 1844 with a practice in Fort Madison, Iowa Territory. After Iowa was admitted to statehood, President Pierce appointed him chief justice of the Oregon Territory. In 1883, Williams became more prominent when he rendered a decision in favor of a freed Negro, who sued his past owner for holding his three children. [He was a northern Democrat opposed to slavery.] Williams compiled this scrapbook comprised of several hundred political cartoons along with allegorical poetry and commentary. Some of his writings are signed and along with the cutout cartoons, reveal a great deal about the author and public opinion. The book is in Poor condition with separated boards, no spine and edges of text frayed with tears. Many of the cartoons presented cover secession, Jefferson Davis, slavery, abolitionism, women’s suffrage, politicians, and the war. A rare compilation with 337 illustrated bookplates, many of which are in color, five envelopes (each with one side pasted down and each visible side illustrated). The first four (4) numbered pages are missing but pages 5-113 remain present and host illustrated plates as do two pages with their numbers missing. A number of pages are blank and some othershost newpaper clippings, these being to the rear section of pages, some of which host handwritten text. Finally, an embossed and lined piece of paper that measures approximately 8 inches by 6 inches and appears to have been remove from a parcel of paper hosts a three stanza poem signed by George H. Williams and dated by him "January 31 1875" with a florish under his signature. [The text shows a word completed in the Poem's first line with two letters in pencil which appear to have been written by him.] The reverse side of the sheet has a short "Mother says...." ink notation that reads like it is relevant to the Poem and one of the sheet's bottom corners has broken off but remains present. In conclusion, we have a remarkable, perhaps unique, significant collection of Civil War political cartoons. SCARCE TO RARE.

From oregonencyclopedia. org/articles/williams-george/:
George H. Williams was a Democratic politician and officeholder in Oregon from the mid-1850s to the early twentieth century. He was chief justice of the territorial supreme court, a delegate to Oregon’s constitutional convention, U.S. senator from Oregon, the first Oregonian to serve in a presidential cabinet, a member of national and international diplomatic commissions, and mayor of Portland. For his service and serenity, the Oregonian referred to him as “Oregon’s Grand Old Man.” He was, Oregonian editor Harvey Scott remarked, “a man who never lost his equipoise, nor even studied or posed to produce sensational or startling effects.”

Born in Lebanon, New York, on March 26, 1823, Williams was educated in public and private schools and read at law in Pompey Hill, New York, learning from an established Whig lawyer. In 1844, he became a lawyer and removed to Iowa, where he was elected judge, serving from 1847 to 1852. He also purchased a newspaper, the Lee County Democrat (later the Iowa Statesman), owning it until 1852.

Williams was active as a Democrat in state politics and was known as a practical politician who avoided partisanship. He became friends with Iowa’s U.S. senators, George Jones and Augustus Dodge, and attracted attention from Stephen A. Douglas, a powerful senator from Illinois. Williams had campaigned for Franklin Pierce in 1852 and was a presidential elector; and with strong support from Douglas, Pierce rewarded Williams with appointment as chief justice of the Oregon Territory Supreme Court in 1853.

Williams arrived in Oregon by steamship from San Francisco on July 2, 1853, accompanied by his wife Kate. On the territorial court, he held circuit in the Willamette Valley, based in Salem, while Matthew Deady was judge for southern Oregon Territory and Cyrus Olney served the northern territory. The first major case Williams heard was Holmes v. Ford (1853), which raised the issue of slavery. Williams ruled that slavery was not legal in Oregon, considering that the territorial legislature had not expressly legalized it. In Vandorf v. Otis (1854), he ruled that an Indian wife had legal claim to half of a 640-acre claim made by herself and her husband under the Oregon Donation Land Law.

During his first decade in Oregon, Williams became president of the Willamette Woolen Company in 1856, a trustee of Willamette University the same year, and an investor in the Oregon Printing and Publishing Company in 1863. Although he was a strong Democrat, he kept at a distance from the Salem Clique Democrats who led the party in Oregon Territory. Nonetheless, one witness reported that he was “a forcible orator” and physical, “his arms going up and down with a regular tilt-hammer motion which earned him the uneuphonious but significant soubriquet of ‘Old Flax Break.’”

In 1857, Williams was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention and played an important role in framing the state constitution by publishing his “Free State Letter” in the July 28 Oregon Statesman, in which he argued against both slavery in Oregon and the residency of free Blacks. His position was based on his practical approach to politics. He was anti-slavery, but he never made a speech castigating the institution as immoral. Nonetheless, pro-slavery Democrats criticized him, but as he said years later, “I knew what I was doing. It was the only argument I could make to the people.”

Williams left the territorial bench in 1859, went into private practice with A. C. Gibbs in Portland, and actively supported the Union during the Civil War. He abandoned the Democratic Party as unpatriotic and became a Republican. The Oregon Senate selected him as a U.S. senator in 1864. He wrote the first Reconstruction Act and the Tenure of Office Act in 1867, which led to the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson in 1868. Williams voted to convict Johnson in the Senate trial.

When U. S. Grant became president, Williams was a vocal supporter and trusted adviser. Grant selected him for membership of the Joint High Commission in 1871 to resolve conflicts with Great Britain over Civil War claims, and in December of that year he appointed him attorney general of the United States. Williams prosecuted cases against the Ku Klux Klan for two years, increasing convictions of Klansmen fourfold.

Grant nominated him as chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court in early December 1873, but he met fierce resistance from the legal establishment because Williams lacked sufficient judicial experience and had mixed government funds with his private accounts—actions that did not rise to illegality but stained his reputation. Several key senators and Oregon politicians, including J. W. Nesmith and Henry Corbett, forced Grant to ask Williams to withdraw his candidacy in January 1874. The controversy damaged Williams’ standing sufficiently that Grant pressed Williams to resign as U.S. Attorney General in April 1875.

Williams returned to Oregon in 1881 as a partner in a private law practice. In 1901, as a reformist-minded politician, he stood as president of the Direct Democracy League, which worked to expand participation in Portland’s electoral politics. In 1902, under a new city charter, Williams ran for mayor on a reformist ticket and won, becoming reportedly the oldest mayor in the nation. His tenure was during the Lewis and Clark Exposition, a time of civic exuberance, but his administration was plagued by police corruption and his failure to stem gambling and prostitution. A grand jury indicted him in January 1905 for failing to order police to close gambling halls, but the county district attorney dismissed the charge. Williams lost his bid for re-election in 1905 to Harry Lane.
Williams was married twice, first to Kate Antwerp in Iowa in 1850 (she died in 1863) and second to Kate George in Oregon in 1867. He had one child by his first marriage and adopted two children during his second. Williams died on April 4, 1910. [For an additional comment on Williams, see https://hd. house divided. dickinson.edu/node/ 23912 (after removing the spaces in the siteaddress.]

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Details

Bookseller
Allington Antiquarian Books, LLC US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
3786
Title
George H. Williams’ Scrapbook w/ 100s of Political Cartoons/ Civil War - 1860s
Author
Various Authors and Artists; Williams, George Henry [Compiler]
Format/Binding
Disbound
Book Condition
Used - Volume Poor; Contents Very Good or better
Jacket Condition
[No Dust Jacket]
Quantity Available
1
Edition
First Edition
Publisher
Various Authors and Artists
Place of Publication
[No Place Stated]
Date Published
[No Date Known]
Weight
0.00 lbs

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Allington Antiquarian Books, LLC

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Winston Salem, North Carolina

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