Arts (125)
    Asian & African (8)
    Books (560)
    Boxes & Tea Caddies (85)
    Clocks (36)
    Decorative (398)
    Dolls & Bears (122)
    Figurines (530)
    Furniture (24)
    Glass (1736)
  ...
View All


Search our
Dealer/Mall
Stores!
 
 



Poodle, Spaghetti Trim, Ucagco




Collector Books

The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles





Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address For Sale


Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address:
$150.00

Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address. 13.5 x 17.5 x 1 inches FramedArtist:Mort Kunstler
Image Size:10" x 12.5"Edition Size: Artist Hansigned and Numbered to 200 / Artist Proofs Signed and Numbered to 20
About the Art:When Lincoln was invited to make his speech, Americans were still trying to recover from the shock of 51,000 casualties incurred at the battle of Gettysburg a few months earlier. A battlefield cemetery for the Northern dead was being dedicated, and organizers wanted a prominent keynote speaker. Rather than choosing the President for the keynote address, they selected Edward Everett, who was a famous orator of the day. The President was apparently asked to speak as a last minute courtesy. He chose to accept the invitation anyway because he felt the need to make a public statement on the meaning of the war.

The day he was scheduled to board a train for Gettysburg, Lincoln almost cancelled his appearance. His young son Tad had become seriously ill, and Lincoln's wife Mary - who had lost another son to illness a year before - became hysterical about Lincoln leaving. He finally decided to go anyway, and was later relieved to learn that his son's condition had improved. Lincoln did not scribble the speech on the back of an envelope as later mythologized, but had instead written it a week or two earlier on White House stationery, and then polished it at Gettysburg the night before the event.

At 10 a.m. on Thursday, November 19, 1863, 15,000 people listened as Edward Everett delivered a rousing two-hour patriotic speech. In contrast, when Lincoln arose, attired in a new black suit, he delivered a surprisingly brief speech. It consisted of 272 words and required no more than two minutes to deliver. He was interrupted by applause only twice, but his audience knew when he finished that they had witnessed an epic event.


His stirring words not only motivated Northerners, they established a vision of mutual respect and tolerance for a reunited America.

For generations to come, all Civil War soldiers - Northern and Southern alike - would be honored by the citizens of a restored American republic as "brave men" and "honored dead" - Americans all.

Buy Now








Related Items:

Framed Civil War Print. Mort Kunstler, ROBERT SHAW and the 54TH MASSACHUSETTS picture

Framed Civil War Print. Mort Kunstler, ROBERT SHAW and the 54TH MASSACHUSETTS

$44.99



Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address picture

Framed Mort Kunstler Handsigned and Numbered Limited Edition Gettysburg Address

$150.00



1977 MORT KUNSTLER Silver Ghost FRAME HOUSE GALLERY Signed L.Ed. 801/1000 PRINT picture

1977 MORT KUNSTLER Silver Ghost FRAME HOUSE GALLERY Signed L.Ed. 801/1000 PRINT

$200.00






  Shopping Cart 
(Your shopping cart is empty)
Subtotal: $0.00
View Cart | Checkout


  Recently Viewed

1.  Lacquered Cedar Wood Box
2.  The White Horse Established 1742 Sign Signed
3.  Pewter Framed Tile, Plate. Ship, Sailing


  Latest Items

1.  Basket, Handpainted,
2.  Apricot Wildflower Pattern Bell
3.  Jade, Jadeite Glass Bell, Westmoreland
4.  Green Glass Strawberry Ptn. Bell
5.  Aladdin Lamp, Rose and White Moonstone


  Facebook



 


Secure Websites

Online Payments

 


| Search Items | Member Profile | My Favorites | Auto Notify | FAQ | Links | Sitemap |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tell Your Friends | Newsletters/Articles/Press Releases |


Antiques, collectibles, estate items, reproductions & art from dealers & collectors world wide at JosephMarc.
Copyright © 2004-2011 JosephMarc, Inc. All rights reserved.