![[CIVIL WAR]. Great seal of the Confederate States of America, two electrotype impressions from an original dye, one silver, one gold-plated.](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2003/NYR/2003_NYR_01246_0042_000(061242).jpg?w=1)
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[CIVIL WAR]. Great seal of the Confederate States of America, two electrotype impressions from an original dye, one silver, one gold-plated.
Both 3¾ inches diameter. Engraved Great Seal with motto "Confederate States of America 22 February 1862" and "Deo Vindice," encircling a wreath of cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, corn, wheat and rice, the figure of George Washington mounted on horseback at center, each with irregular rim, the silver example in its original leather case.
RARE IMPRINTS OF THE ORIGINAL GREAT SEAL OF THE CONFEDERACY
Two rare electrotype copies of the Great Seal of the Confederacy, produced by Colonel John Pickett in 1872 using the original engraved seal which had been ordered by the Confederate Government. On April 30, 1863, The Confederate Congress agreed by joint resolution to create a seal of the Confederacy which would "consist of a device representing an equestrian portrait of Washington (after the statue which surmounts his monument in the Capitol Square at Richmond) surrounded with a wreath of the principal agricultural products of the Confederacy." The seal, it was determined, would also incorporate the Latin phrase "Deo Vindice" or "God Will Vindicate." Secretary of State Judah P. Benjamin asked the Confederate commissioner in England, James Mason, to find a suitable engraver to design the seal. Joseph S. Wyon of London was chosen for the job, which he completed in 1864. The finished seal, in solid silver, was sent to America in the care of Confederate agent Henry Hotze with orders that it be thrown into the sea if his ship was stopped by the Union Navy. The seal finally arrived at Richmond in August, 1864. When the city fell to Union forces in April, 1865, the seal was smuggled out by the wife of William J. Bromwell, a clerk in the State Department. In 1872, Bromwell's attorney, John T. Pickett, had electrotype copies of the unique original seal made in various metals before giving it as a gift to Thomas Selfridge. It is not known how many copies of the seal were made, but it was apparently reproduced in quite limited numbers. Pickett subsequently sold copies to benefit orphans in the South. Today, the original electrotype impressions of the Great Seal of the Confederacy are rare. (2)
Both 3¾ inches diameter. Engraved Great Seal with motto "Confederate States of America 22 February 1862" and "Deo Vindice," encircling a wreath of cotton, tobacco, sugar cane, corn, wheat and rice, the figure of George Washington mounted on horseback at center, each with irregular rim, the silver example in its original leather case.
RARE IMPRINTS OF THE ORIGINAL GREAT SEAL OF THE CONFEDERACY
Two rare electrotype copies of the Great Seal of the Confederacy, produced by Colonel John Pickett in 1872 using the original engraved seal which had been ordered by the Confederate Government. On April 30, 1863, The Confederate Congress agreed by joint resolution to create a seal of the Confederacy which would "consist of a device representing an equestrian portrait of Washington (after the statue which surmounts his monument in the Capitol Square at Richmond) surrounded with a wreath of the principal agricultural products of the Confederacy." The seal, it was determined, would also incorporate the Latin phrase "Deo Vindice" or "God Will Vindicate." Secretary of State Judah P. Benjamin asked the Confederate commissioner in England, James Mason, to find a suitable engraver to design the seal. Joseph S. Wyon of London was chosen for the job, which he completed in 1864. The finished seal, in solid silver, was sent to America in the care of Confederate agent Henry Hotze with orders that it be thrown into the sea if his ship was stopped by the Union Navy. The seal finally arrived at Richmond in August, 1864. When the city fell to Union forces in April, 1865, the seal was smuggled out by the wife of William J. Bromwell, a clerk in the State Department. In 1872, Bromwell's attorney, John T. Pickett, had electrotype copies of the unique original seal made in various metals before giving it as a gift to Thomas Selfridge. It is not known how many copies of the seal were made, but it was apparently reproduced in quite limited numbers. Pickett subsequently sold copies to benefit orphans in the South. Today, the original electrotype impressions of the Great Seal of the Confederacy are rare. (2)
Special notice
This lot is exempt from Sales Tax.