1 / 2
Click To Zoom

Condition Report

Contact Information

Lot 123

Sale 6247 - Books and Manuscripts
Feb 6, 2024 11:00AM ET
Live / Philadelphia
Own a similar item?
Estimate
$600 - 900

Lot Description

[Presidential] [Fillmore, Millard] Boardman, H.A.: The New Doctrine of Intervention, tried by the Teachings of Washington...

From the Library of President Millard Fillmore

[Fillmore, Millard] Boardman, H.A.
The New Doctrine of Intervention, tried by the Teachings of Washington: An Address Delivered in the Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia…
Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo and Co., 1852. Second edition. 8vo. 63, 24 (ads) pp.; 4 pp. of ads tipped in at front. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author on front wrapper to President Millard Fillmore: "President Fillmore--with respects of The Author--". Original limp wrappers, printed in black, light wear to extremities; all edges trimmed. 

Presentation copy, inscribed by the author on the front wrapper to 13th President Millard Fillmore. This address given by Henry Augustus Boardman, pastor of the Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia and prolific author, denounces the policy of political intervention proposed by deposed Hungarian leader Lajos Kossuth in his speech before Congress. Kossuth, who was briefly President-Regent of Hungary, fled the country in 1851 after the collapse of his power-base. Considered a revolutionary, he was feted across England and America and addressed the Congress, exhorting them to intervene in the quarrels of foreign countries to support democracy and freedom. Boardman was highly critical of this idea. By the time Fillmore received this pamphlet, he probably shared Boardman's views. Kossuth, who was a flamboyant figure, was invited to the White House at the time of his address to Congress, and used the opportunity to call for American intervention. Fillmore mildly rebuked him, making it clear that intervention in the affairs of Europe was not American policy. Kossuth was so angry at this that he behaved very badly for the rest of the evening. 

Millard Fillmore, one of the most literate of Presidents, had one of the most extensive libraries of any President.

Height: 9 in. X Width: 1/2 in.

Condition Report

Contact Information

Search