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Lot 213: WARRE, HENRY JAMES

Est: $60,000 USD - $80,000 USDSold:
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USJune 16, 2005

Item Overview

Description

Sketches in North America and the Oregon Territory. London: Lithographed, Printed and Published by Dickinson & Co., [1848]

Broadsheets (20 5/8 x 14 1/4 in.; 524 x 362 mm). 16 fine handcolored tinted lithographed plates after Warre (containing 20 views), engraved map partially handcolored in outline; lacking dedication leaf (not issued with all copies according to Howes), plate "Falls of the Kamanis" remargined and laid down, scattered light foxing and marginal soiling, a few corners creased. Contemporary half green morocco over marbled boards, spine gilt-lettered, red-sprinkled edges, plain endpapers; extremities worn, rebacked, preserving original spine, corners restored.

LITERATURE AND REFERENCES

Wagner-Camp 157; Graff 4543; Howes W114; Smith 10727; Sabin 101455; Abbey, Travel 656
CATALOGUE NOTE

First edition, colored issue, of the most notable color-plate book on the Pacific Northwest. In May 1845, Captain James Warre was sent from Montreal, in the company of Lieutenant Vavasour of the Royal Engineers, on a military reconnaissance mission to the Oregon Territory. The already uneasy joint occupation of Oregon by the United States and Great Britain had threatened to develop into war as American expansionists demanded that a northernmost boundary be established between the rival claimants. (In 1844, Democratic congressional candidates began rallying under the slogan "Fifty-four Forty [degrees and minutes of latitude] or Fight!") By the time Warre returned to England with his accumulated intelligence, a compromise had settled the dispute, with the Oregon Treaty of 1846 fixing the boundary between the United States and British America on the forty-ninth parallel.

With the military object of his mission no longer relevant, Warre turned a portion of his notes and drawings into the present magnificent view book, which contains "the only western color plates comparable in beauty to those by Bodmer" (Howes). His plates provide dramatic depictions of Puget Sound, the Columbia RIver, the Rocky Mountains, and Mount Hood, while the accompanying travel narrative describes Warre and Vavasour's stays at Fort Vancouver, Fort George, and the Willamette settlement and their encounters with Blackfeet, Assiniboine, and Cree peoples. The map is colored to show the routes of the party to the Pacific and back to the east coast.

Artist or Maker

Auction Details

Fine Books and Manuscripts Including Americana

by
Sotheby's
June 16, 2005, 12:00 AM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US