Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan Henkels

Name/Title

Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan Henkels

Entry/Object ID

04.13.6

Description

A handwritten letter on one page of stationery headed, "Red Hill on the Staunton, Brookneal, Campbell County, Virginia." From Mrs. Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan V. Henkels. Dated June 19, 1910. Mrs. Harrison gives a short provenance of the Sully portrait and requests a base price of $15,000 for the collection.

Transcription

Transcription

RED HILL ON THE STAUNTON BROOKNEAL, CAMPBELL COUNTY VIRGINIA Mr. Stan V. Henkels, (June 19/1910) My Dear Sir: I have received your letter acknowledging the box of papers and silver and the later one telling of the receipt of the key. I send you the bill of lading of the furniture which was sent you a few days ago. I ordered the portrait expressed at once and I hope that it will reach you by Monday as I live some distance from Richmond I could not attend to this myself. I think you will be pleased with the excellence of this picture. It is as I wrote you the only authentic picture of Henry in existence. The miniature from which it was painted belongs to someone not connected with the family and I do not know his name but I understand that he keeps it in a vault and has willed it to the state of Virginia. I intended willing this collection of relics to the state but family misfortunes have made it necessary for me to raise money. I think that $15,000 is a moderate price for the collection and I put that as the minimum price. I was delighted when you wrote that you did not doubt that the collection would bring my price. and I am sure that after seeing it you will be even more assured. I would like this to net me at least $15,000. above all expenses. The only papers of Patrick Henry which I did not send you were family letters. I have today come accross [sic] another bundle and I will look over it at once and send you anything of public interest. June 19th. 1910 Very truly yours, Mrs. M. B. Harrison

Language

English

Dimensions

Width

10 in

Length

6 in

Dimension Notes

Details: 9-3/4 inches x 5-3/4 inches

Provenance

Notes

This letter belongs to a collection of correspondence primarily from Lucy Gray Henry Harrison (1857–1944) to Stanislaus “Stan” Vincent Henkels (1854–1926) concerning a proposed sale of Patrick Henry family heirlooms in 1910. Mrs. Harrison was Patrick Henry's great-granddaughter and the last Henry descendant to own and live at Red Hill. She grew up in Richmond, Virginia, and moved to Duluth, Minnesota, after marrying real estate millionaire Matthew Bland Harrison (1853–1892) in 1886. In 1905, she inherited Red Hill and moved onto the property, where she lived along with her sister, Elizabeth Watkins Henry Lyons (1855–1920), and her assistant, Elizabeth H. Kerper (1890–1964) Mrs. Harrison inherited many of the family heirlooms that had belonged to Patrick Henry and many of his papers. In 1910, on the advice of Philadelphia neurologist and writer Dr. Weir Mitchell (1829–1914), she contacted Stan V. Henkels about a possible private sale or public auction of some of these pieces. Mr. Henkels was an antique dealer in Philadelphia well-known for his auctions and private sales to collectors. The correspondence from Mrs. Harrison to Mr. Henkels details their business negotiations from May 1910 leading up to the sale of the items in Philadelphia on December 20, 1910. It also includes letters concerning a settling of accounts between them up through February 1911. The Henry heirlooms Mrs. Harrison sent to Mr. Henkels’ auction included a collection of Henry’s letters and other documents. Two of these, a draft of a 1795 letter (76.5.7) from Henry to George Washington (1732–1799) and a 1782 land grant (76.5.6) signed by Governor Benjamin Harrison V. (1726–1791), are now in the Red Hill collection after being purchased at Mr. Henkels’ auction by Charles Hamilton (1847–1930) and donated to the PHMF by Mr. Hamilton’s heirs in 1959. The collection of papers also included Henry’s handwritten draft of the Stamp Act Resolves, which Mr. Hamilton bought for $1,400 and which is now in the special collections of Colonial Williamsburg’s John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library. A copy of the receipt for the reimbursement of the gunpowder that Lord Dunmore ordered taken from the Williamsburg Magazine in April 1775 was bought at auction by the Virginia State Library for $100 and is now housed at the Virginia Museum of History & Culture. Other papers included letters between Henry and Richard Henry Lee (1732–1794) and letters to Henry from Henry Lee III (1756–1818) and David Ross (1739–1819). The silver caster set (96.1.1-6) and saltcellars (76.19.1-4) owned by Patrick Henry are in the Red Hill collection. Henry may have purchased the casters at the 1776 sale of the belongings of John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore (1730–1809), as Mrs. Harrison mentions in her December 10 letter to Mr. Henkels (04.13.19). Mrs. Harrison decided to keep the saltcellars while she sent the caster set in June 1910 to be sold at the December auction. The set was sold to Charles Hamilton for $200. Mrs. Harrison also sent a silver plate frame (or stand) to Mr. Henkels, which was sold at the auction to a Mr. Smith for $16. The two pieces of furniture Mrs. Harrison sent to auction were Henry’s desk and corner chair. A photograph of the desk appears in the 1907 biography, “The True Patrick Henry” by George Morgan. Mrs. Harrison shipped the desk to Philadelphia in June 1910, and it was sold on order at the December auction for $500. The desk is pictured in Mr. Henkels’ December 1910 auction catalog (76.5.2), along with the corner chair and the caster set. The black walnut corner chair passed directly through the Henry family line from Patrick to Lucy Harrison, and it is said to be the chair in which Henry was sitting when he died on June 6, 1799 of complications from intussusception. An image of the chair appears in “The True Patrick Henry” and the auction catalog (76.5.2). It was sold on order at the auction for $225, then later given to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation by Elizabeth Gribbel Corkran (1897–1976), a descendant of the buyer. Thomas Sully’s (1783–1872) portrait of Patrick Henry is an oil painting on canvas commissioned in 1815 by Henry’s first biographer, William Wirt (1772–1834). An engraving of the portrait was featured on the frontispiece of Wirt’s 1817 biography, “Sketches of the Life & Character of Patrick Henry.” Sully based the portrait on one of the few images of Henry painted from life: a 1795 miniature created by his half-brother, Lawrence Sully (1769–1804). Thomas Sully’s portrait of Henry was given by Wirt to Henry’s youngest son, John (1796–1868), who passed the portrait on to his son William Wirt Henry (1831–1900), who loaned it to the Virginia State Library in Richmond from 1873 to 1884 before he passed it on to his daughter, Lucy Harrison. In 1902, Mrs. Harrison loaned the portrait again to the Virginia State Library but reclaimed it in 1910 to sell it at Mr. Henkels’ auction, where it was purchased by Charles Hamilton for $4,000. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation later purchased the portrait from the Hamilton family and currently has it in its collection. Although Thomas Sully’s portrait was painted years after Henry’s death, those who knew Henry in life, including his wife Dorothea Dandridge Henry (1757–1831), Chief Justice John Marshall (1755–1835), Virginia politician Francis Corbin (1749/50–1821), and Episcopal clergyman Rev. John Buchanan (1748–1822) attested to the accuracy of the depiction, as Mrs. Harrison tells Mr. Henkels in her letter of May 25, 1910 (04.13.2). Lawrence Sully’s miniature of Henry was painted from life in 1795. The miniature passed through the family of Patrick Henry’s older half-brother, John Syme Jr. (1727–?), and in 1910, was owned by Syme’s great-grandson, John Syme Fleming Jr. (1842–1922). Mr. Fleming did not give the miniature to the state but rather sent it to be auctioned at the same 1910 sale that Mrs. Harrison sent her Henry heirlooms to. It was auctioned for $660 to Gilbert Sunderland Parker (1861–1921), curator of paintings at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. At some point, it passed into the possession of Herbert Lee Pratt (1871–1945), who left it to Amherst College in 1945. Two family letters were included in Henkels’ auction catalog for the December 1910 sale: one to Henry from his daughter, Martha Henry Fontaine (1755–1818), dated January 13, 1799, and another to Henry from his son, William Henry (1763–1798), dated July 2, 1795. Two other letters from John Tyler (1790–1862) are addressed to John Henry, the youngest son of Patrick Henry and the grandfather of Lucy Harrison. In those letters, dated December 27, 1852, and January 18, 1853, Tyler writes of his father’s admiration for Patrick Henry. The Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation purchased this letter from an online seller in May 2004 as part of the collection of correspondence.