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Lot 249

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Estimate
$15,000 - 20,000
Price Realized
$14,720
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium

Lot Description

[AMERICANA]. Chicago Illustrated. Literary Descriptions by James W. Sheahan. Chicago: Jevne & Almini, January 1866-January 1867.


13 original parts [all published], oblong folio (295 x 375 mm). THE COMPLETE SET OF 52 TINTED LITHOGRAPHED PLATES containing city views by Louis Kurz and the Chicago Lithographing Company; letterpress prospectus tipped-in to part I. (Large closed tear to "Chicago University" plate in part 6, amended on verso, a few others in part 6 with short closed tears at margins, first leaf of text in part 1 toned, some offsetting to text from plates.) EIGHT IN ORIGINAL LITHOGRAPHED PICTORIAL WRAPPERS, the other five parts in modern wrappers (original wrapper spines reinforced, covers of part 2 with small loss at upper corners and a few closed tears at edges, some split or chips to a few spines); folding case.

FIRST EDITION IN ORIGINAL MONTHLY PARTS OF THIS PRE-FIRE RARITY

Chicago Illustrated remains the most comprehensive record of the physical appearance of the city destroyed by the Great Fire of 1871. Austrian-born Louis Kurz created the lithographed views "exud[ing] an almost palpable sense of the hustle and bustle of pre-Fire Chicago" (Chicago 101). Otto Jevne and Peter M. Almini, decorators known for ornamental painting, joined with Kurz (who would later form the famous Kurz & Allison firm) and two other lithographers to form the Chicago Lithographing Company. James W. Sheahan, a journalist who published the Chicago Times and later the Chicago Post, contributed the text. Their business would later be destroyed in the 1871 fire.

The complete work was originally meant to include 25 parts. In the prospectus for the work, Jevne & Almini promised "to publish, in Monthly Parts, an illustrated History of Chicago,—that is, a history of the more important and striking evidences of the city's improvement and enterprise." The parts were issued at $1.50 per fascicle until the project terminated in January 1867. "Constituting the best visual evidence of their appearance, the plates exude an almost palpable sense of the hustle and bustle of pre-Fire Chicago...In general Chicago Illustrated is a paean to the new colossus rising alongside the lake" (Chicago 101). Chicago Ante-Fire Imprints 1047; Caxton Chicago 101, 3; Howes J-108; Sabin 12623.

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