The Book of Mormon Earns Record at $112k in Fall 2021 Americana Auction American Revolution material brings strong results, alongside Latin Americana The fall 2021 offering of Printed & Manuscript Americana was held on Thursday, September 30 delivering remarkable results across the board. The auction brought $938,298, with 89% of lots finding homes; demonstrating an upward trend and strength in the category as the fifth straight auction of Americana to have an over 80% sell-through rate with sale totals reaching or exceeding the high estimate. Browse the Complete Results from the Printed & Manuscript Americana Sale Book of Mormon & Latter Day Saints Material The Book of Mormon, first edition, Palmyra, 1830. Sold for $112,500, a record for the book. A heavily restored first edition of the Book of Mormon brought an astounding $112,500, the most of any of the 35 sales Swann can trace at auction since 2007. Also of note from the Latter Day Saints material was an 1844 printing of George T.M. Davis’ An Authentic Account of the Massacre of Joseph Smith ($7,250); and an 1848 printing of Brigham Young’s General Epistle from the Council of the Twelve Apostles ($6,250). American Revolution St. John Honeywood, The Battles of Lexington and Concord, after the famous engravings by Doolittle, circa 1778. Sold for $100,000. The most notable record was set for the iconic Boston Tea Party mezzotint, Bostonian’s Paying the Excise Man, or Tarring & Feathering, 1774, by Philip Dawe, at $50,000. Additional lots relating to the American Revolution included an attractive set of 1777 watercolor copies of the famous Doolittle views of Lexington and Concord ($100,000), a letterbook of New York iron merchants pushing back against the Stamp Act ($25,000), and the diary of a Connecticut officer imprisoned by the British ($25,000). Latin Americana Antonio Parra, Descripcion de diferentes piezas de historia natural, las mas de ramo maritimo, Havana, 1787. Sold for $9,375. Latin Americana included a 1646 first edition of Alonso de Ovalle’s history of Chile ($15,000); the 1698 first Mexican edition of the Jesuit manual ($6,750); and 1787 publishing of Antonio Parra’s richly illustrated guide to Cuba’s maritime wildlife (9$9,375); in addition to a complete set of Juana Inés de La Cruz’s collected works published in 1689, 1693 and 1701 ($50,000). Additional Highlights Ulysses S. Grant, General Orders, No. 108—his farewell order to the troops, 1865. Sold for $9,375. Additional highlights included a printing of General Grant’s June 1865 farewell order to his troops, which brought a record at $9,375; a strong group of group of early American children’s chapbooks, including The Exhibition of Tom Thumb, 1787 ($4,000); the papers of nineteenth-century Cherokee merchant Joshua Ross ($20,000); and a bound volume of the Pennsylvania Herald, 1787–91, which included a very early printing of the United States Constitution ($30,000). “Seeing some of our old regular customers during the first public preview back for Americana felt normal in the best possible way. That carried through into the auction results with vigorous bidding from customers both old and new. Rare and important material from the American Revolution still finds an enthusiastic audience. The results were strong across all categories, though, from children’s books to the American West.”Rick Stattler, Specialist for the Sale & house Vice President Consign with Swann. Share Facebook Twitter October 6, 2021Author: Kelsie JankowskiCategory: Printed & Manuscript Americana Tags: American Revolution Book of Mormon Boston Tea Party latin americana Lexington & Concord Printed & Manuscript Americana Records & Results Stamp Act Ulysses S. Grant Previous Artist Profile: Belkis Ayón Next Upcoming Highlights: Fine Books & Autographs—At Auction October 28, 2021 Recommended Posts Documenting the Underground Railroad: The Story Behind the Shugart Family Papers Printed & Manuscript Americana September 13, 2019 This Season’s Successes: Winter-Spring 2021 Auctions in Review Swann August 26, 2021 2018: Year in Review Swann December 21, 2018