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Lot 170

Sale 1853 - American History: Premier Auction
Jun 21, 2019 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
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Estimate
$600 - 800
Price Realized
$875
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium

Lot Description

William Henry Harrison 1840 Campaign Wedgwood Transferware Ewer

Transferware ewer, 8.5 in. tall, featuring William Henry Harrison's North Bend, Ohio, cabin and showing him plowing the land himself. With maker's mark on underside, "Columbian Star / 444 / Oct. 28th, 1840 / Jno. Ridgway." This pattern was produced for Harrison's successful 1840 presidential campaign. We have seen a handful of pieces from the same series over the years, including the teapot and plates, but have never before offered the design in this form.

The Harrison campaign of 1840 is generally regarded as the first American presidential race for which supporters of both sides produced ephemera used to promote their candidates. Harrison, known familiarly as "The Farmer From North Bend" (Ohio) is shown here with a horse-drawn plow outside the door of his humble cabin. In reality, by 1840, Harrison was a wealthy landowner, residing at Grouseland, his Indiana Territory mansion. Nonetheless, the Columbian Star pattern was designed to promote Harrison's supposed backwoods origins.


This lot is located in Cincinnati.

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