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  2025-01-25 09:00:00 2025-01-25 09:00:00 America/New_York Case Antiques Case Antiques : 2025 Winter Fine Art & Antiques (Day 1) https://auction.caseantiques.com/auctions/case-antiques/2025-winter-fine-art-antiques-day-1-16081
Live Auction at our Knoxville Gallery featuring 1,200+ lots from fine Southern estates and private and museum collections. Sale begins Sat. Jan. 25 at 9 AM with lots #1-783 and continues Sun. Jan. 26 at 1 PM with lots #784-1261 (separate catalog). Estates represented include Gertrude S. Caldwell, Nashville; John Z. C. Thomas, Knoxville; Dr. Larry Wolfe, Nashville; Norman Luboff; plus the collection of Jon E. Jones, Cookeville, and deaccessioned art from the Hunter Museum, Vanderbilt University Museum, the Memphis-Brooks Museum, and more.
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Lot 619

Scarce Civil War Print: Appomattox Courthouse Scene

Estimate: $300 - $350
Starting Bid
$150

Bid Increments

Price Bid Increment
$0 $10
$100 $25
$500 $50
$1,000 $100
$3,000 $200
$5,000 $500
$10,000 $1,000
$20,000 $2,000
$50,000 $5,000
$100,000 $10,000

Scarce Civil War related lithograph with tinstone,  "The Room in The McLean House, at Appomattox C.H., in which Gen.Lee surrendered to Gen.Grant." Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1867 by Wilmer McLean, published by Henry B. Major and Joseph F. Knapp, New York, 1867.  Housed under glass in a walnut molded frame with gilt sight edge. Sight: 22 1/2" x 31 1/2". Frame: 30"h x 39"W. Background (from the National Archives): "As to the beginning and the end of the Civil War itself, there is only one man who book-ended it so literally. His name was Wilmer McLean. On July 18, 1861, Confederate General Beauregard had sat down for supper in the home of a Manassas local when a cannonball pierced through the house and landed in the kitchen fireplace. It was something of a surprise, but not so overwhelming as to ruin Beauregard’s sense of humor “A comical effect of this artillery fight was the destruction of the dinner of myself and staff by a Federal shell that fell into the fire-place of my headquarters at the McLean House,” he wrote in his diary. Perhaps the shell would have been more of a shock had it not been just one of many volleys in the first major campaign of the Civil War: the Battle of Bull Run.The house belonged to a man named Wilmer McLean, who had purchased the property in 1854. Beauregard had commandeered the property—and McLean’s well-situated house and barn—as his headquarters and, later, as a hospital for Confederate troops. McLean was happy to oblige the general as he himself was a retired officer in the Virginia militia and had profited nicely off of renting the property and speculating on commodities like sugar. But by the time the Second Battle of Bull Run had occurred on his doorstep and a pregnant wife, McLean had had enough.  The profits no longer outweighed the dangers, and he decided to move south. In 1863, Wilmer McLean settled on the property surrounding the Two Rein Tavern at a small and quiet crossroads over 100 miles south of the chaos of Civil War battlefields. For two years, his family lived in the relative quietude of southern Virginia until, on April 9, 1865, Charles Marshall—Gen. Robert E. Lee’s aide—approached him. Marshall asked McLean to show him a place that was suitable for Lee and another general to meet. McLean first showed him a dilapidated home, but when Marshall rejected it, McLean reluctantly offered up his own residence for the meeting. Marshall accepted. Lee arrived at McLean’s Appomattox Court House property at about one o’clock in the afternoon in a crisp uniform. Shortly after, wearing his muddied field uniform, the other general arrived. It was Ulysses S. Grant. For about 25 minutes the two spoke in McLean’s parlor, until eventually Lee brought up the purpose of their meeting, the surrender of the Confederate Army. Minutes later, the Civil War ended. Such it is that the Civil War started in Wilmer McLean’s kitchen and ended in his parlor." Mr. McClean, hoping to recoup some of the losses incurred from hosting two armies on his farm, offered this print for sale, but very few were ultimately purchased by a war-weary public. 

Condition

Some light acid burn and toning to paper. Wear and abrasions to frame. 

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