404

Office of the American Express Co., Wells, Butterfield & Co., 1859 and 1865 Issued Draft Pair with O

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Wells Fargo & Express Co's Memorabilia Start Price:60.00 USD Estimated At:100.00 - 200.00 USD
Office of the American Express Co., Wells, Butterfield & Co., 1859 and 1865 Issued Draft Pair with O
SOLD
120.00USDto floor+ buyer's premium
This item SOLD at 2022 Dec 15 @ 15:25UTC-5 : EST/CDT
PLEASE CONTACT US TO REGISTER FOR LIVE BIDDING OR ABSENTEE BIDDING AT:

PH: 1-201-944-4800
FAX: 1-201-839-3336
Web: www.archivesinternational.com
Email: info@archivesinternational.com

Snail Mail: Archives International Auctions
1060 Main Street, Suite 202, River Edge, NJ 07661

The auction will take place on December 15, 2022 at AIA's office located at 1060 Main St., Suite #202, River Edge, NJ 07661 beginning at 11:00 AM
New York, 1859 and 1865. Lot of 2 drafts from the Office of the American Express Co., Wells, Butterfield & Co. includes: $25 I/U Check Signed by Daniel Butterfield; and $31.25 I/C Check. Both have brown print with a vignette of a train at top left, Dog at bottom center, Correspondent bank is the Bank of the Ilion. VF condition. Printer, John H. Duyckinck. Scarce and early American Express Fiscal item. Daniel Adams Butterfield was a New York businessman, a Union general in the American Civil War, and Assistant U.S. Treasurer in New York. After working for American Express, co-founded by his father, Butterfield served in the Civil War, where he was soon promoted brigadier general, and wounded at Gaines' Mill. While recuperating, he either wrote or re-wrote a popular bugle-call for burials, called Taps. He commanded a division at Fredericksburg, and then became Hooker's chief of staff, sharing both the credit for improved morale and responsibility for the licentious behavior that Hooker tolerated in camp. He also became embroiled in Hooker’s political feuds with Burnside and Meade. Wounded at Gettysburg, he served in Sherman’s Atlanta campaign, before retiring from front-line service through illness. He later received the Medal of Honor. He was involved in the Black Friday gold scandal in the Grant administration. The American Express Company had been founded by his father, John Butterfield. (2)