Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan Henkels

Name/Title

Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan Henkels

Entry/Object ID

04.13.9

Description

A handwritten letter on one page of stationery headed "Brookneal, Va." From Mrs. Lucy Henry Harrison to Stan V. Henkels. Dated July 5th, 1910. Mrs. Harrison again requests that Henkels acknowledge that he has received the items she sent by mail.

Transcription

Transcription

Brookneal, Va., July 5th 1910 Mr. Stan V. Henkels, My Dear Sir: I have not received a reply to my letter of last week, asking you if you had received the articles which I had sent you. You acknowledged the receipt of the first express, sent on June 14th, but, I am yet uninformed as to whether you have received the expresses sent on the 17th & 21st of June and the freight sent on the 17th. As these articles are of great intrinsic value I should like to know if they have arrived safely and I hope very much that you will be able to report a prospect of a good sale. Do you ever sell to Mr. J. P. Morgan? I wish very much that the collection could be put into his museum. It should be kept together and at the same time be accessible to students. Please let me hear from you at once. Very truly yours, Mrs. M. B. Harrison Per E. H. K. July 5th

Language

English

Dimensions

Width

6-1/2 in

Length

9-1/2 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. In the letter, Mrs. Harrison alludes to the collection of banker and financier J. Pierpont Morgan (1837–1913), who began collecting rare manuscripts, books, and artworks in the 1890s. The Morgan Library and Museum, constructed near his home in New York between 1902 and 1906, houses the collection. The Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation purchased this letter from an online seller in May 2004 as part of the collection of correspondence.