Lot 296

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Description:

Autographs of Prominent American and European Musicians, Actors, and Political Leaders

This autograph album contains the signatures of more than 70 prominent American and European notables, including a president, several presidential aspirants, and a wide array of musical and theatrical luminaries of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This book should be inspected in person to see the range of signatures which cannot be communicated in a short auction description. Viewing available in our offices. This was assembled by Detroit pianist Kathleen S. Trowbridge, the volume is the result of a lifetime of collecting. She obtained most from her own correspondence or attendance at musical and theatrical performances in Detroit, but she also benefited from private school teachers who wrote to prominent acquaintances and received signatures for Trowbridge and the generosity of descendants of Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan. Her cousin Donald M. Dickinson was Postmaster General during the second Grover Cleveland administration, giving Trowbridge access to the White House, where she gained a letter from First Lady Frances Cleveland and access to other influential people.

Kathleen S. Trowbridge, Autograph Album, 1838-1949, 122 pp., with a combination of signatures and inscriptions directly on pages, some slips pasted to pages, and other signatures and letters interleaved. Leather volume measures 5.75ʺ x 8.75ʺ. Some toning; some wear to edge and spine; very good.

Among the autographs are those of:
- Xaver Scharwenka (1850-1924), German composer and pianist of Polish descent.
- Emil von Sauer (1862-1942), German composer, pianist, and piano teacher, who had been a pupil of Franz Liszt.
- Reginald De Koven (1859-1920), American music critic and composer of comic operas.
- Hermann Scholtz (1845-1918), German pianist and composer.
- Eugen d'Albert (1864-1932), Scottish pianist and composer.
- Therese Malten, stage name of Therese Müller (1855-1930), German dramatic soprano.
- Ernestine Schumann-Heink (1861-1936), Austrian-American operatic contralto of Bohemian descent.
- Theodore Thomas (1835-1905), German-American violinist and conductor and first director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (1891-1905).
- Alfred Hertz (1872-1942), Prussian-born conductor.
- Olga Samaroff, born Lucy Mary Olga Agnes Hickenlooper (1880-1948), American pianist and music critic.
- Arthur Foote (1853-1937), American classical composer, a member of the "Boston Six."
- Charles Wakefield Cadman (1881-1946), American composer.
- Julius Schulhoff (1825-1898), Bohemian pianist and composer of Jewish ancestry.
- Kneisel Quartet, including Romanian violinist Franz Knielsel (1865-1926), German-American cellist Alwin Schroeder (1855-1928), Croatian-American violist Louis Svećenski (1862-1926), and Polish-American violinist Julius Theodorowicz (1877-1964).
- Belgian cellist Jean Gerardy (1877-1929), Austrian-American violinist Fritz Kreisler (1875-1962), and Polish-American pianist Josef Hofmann (1876-1957).
- Norwegian polar explorer, scientist, diplomat, and humanitarian Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930), who received the 1922 Nobel Peace Prize for his work for displaced victims of World War I.
- Edwin Arnold (1832-1904), English poet and journalist.
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882), American poet and educator.
- John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892), American poet and abolitionist.
- Georg Ebers (1837-1898), German Egyptologist and novelist.
- Max O'Rell, pen name of Léon Paul Blouet (1847-1903), French author and journalist.
- Celia Thaxter (1835-1894), American poet and writer.
- Lawrence Hutton (1843-1904), American essayist and critic.
- George Bancroft (1800-1891), American historian, who served as Secretary of the Navy (1845-1846), and U.S. minister to the United Kingdom (1846-1849) and Prussia/Germany (1867-1874).
- Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. (1809-1894), American physician, poet, and polymath.
- Frederick Marryat (1792-1848), Royal Navy officer, novelist, and acquaintance of Charles Dickens. Handwritten portion of novel Percival Keene (1842).
- Senator John C. Calhoun (1782-1850), Autograph Letter Signed, to U.S. Ambassador to France Lewis Cass (1782-1868), January 31, 1838, introducing relative Dr. Andrew Bonaparte Calhoun (1809-1897), who was visiting France "to improve himself in his profession."
- Senator Henry Clay (1777-1852), Autograph Letter Signed, to U.S. Ambassador to France Lewis Cass (1782-1868), October 15, 1840, introducing Caroline Bayard, daughter of former Senator James A. Bayard (1767-1815) of Delaware.
- Senator Daniel Webster (1782-1852), Autograph Letter Signed, to U.S. Ambassador to France Lewis Cass (1782-1868), May 7, 1840, introducing E. D. Harbour of Louisiana.
- Albert Gallatin (1761-1849), Autograph Letter Signed, to U.S. Ambassador to France Lewis Cass (1782-1868), May 30, 1840, introducing Charles Oliver of Baltimore.
- First Lady Frances F. Cleveland (1864-1947), Autograph Letter Signed, to Mrs. Dickinson, ca. 1880s-1890s, on Executive Mansion letterhead.
- Martin Van Buren (1782-1862), Autograph Letter Signed, to U.S. Ambassador to France Lewis Cass (1782-1868), November 16, 1840, introducing Erastus Corning (1794-1872) and Colonel Isaiah Townsend Jr. (1813-1859).
- Ethelbert W. Nevin (1862-1901), American composer of light songs and piano pieces.
- Sir Henry Irving (1838-1905), English stage actor and manager, the first actor to be awarded a knighthood.
- Dame Julia Myra Hess (1890-1965), English pianist.
- Percy Grainger (1882-1961), Australian-born composer and pianist who lived in the United States from 1914.
- Teresa Carreño (1853-1917), Venezuelan pianist, soprano, composer, and conductor.
- Katherine Goodson Hinton (1872-1958), English pianist.
- William Hunter Kendal (1843-1917), English actor and stage manager.
- Madge Kendal (1848-1935), English actress, and wife of William Hunter Kendal.
- Edwin Booth (1833-1893), American actor and older brother of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth. Autograph Letter Signed, to Mr. Taylor, February 21, 1882.
- Adelaide Ristori (1822-1906), an Italian stage actress.
- Lawrence Barrett (1838-1891), American stage actor. Autograph Letter Signed, July 20, 1880.
- E. H. Sothern (1859-1933), an American stage actor who specialized in Shakespearean roles.
- William J. Florence (1831-1891), American actor and playwright and co-founder of the Masonic Order of the Shriners.
- Anton Lang (1875-1838), German potter and actor in Oberammergau Passion Play.
- Edwin Forrest (1806-1872), American Shakespearean actor.
- Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933), British novelist and playwright.
- Edward MacDowell (1860-1908), American composer and pianist.
- Henry Edward Krehbiel (1854-1923), American music critic for The New York Tribune (1880s-1923).
- William J. Henderson (1855-1937), American music critic for The New York Times (1887-1902) and The New York Sun (1902-1937).
- Philip Hale (1854-1934), American music critic for the Boston Journal (1891-1903) and the Boston Herald (1903-1934).
- George P. Goodale (1843-1919), drama editor for The Detroit Free Press (1865-1919).
- Flonzaley Quartet, including Italian violinist Adolfo Betti (1875-1950), Swiss violinist Alfred Pochon (1878-1959), Italian violist Uga Ara (1876-1936), Belgian violoncellist Iwan d'Archambeau (1879-1955).
- Elena Gerhardt (1883-1961), German mezzo-soprano singer.
- Frank Bibb (1887-1965), American composer and pianist.
- Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge (1833-1897), a member of the British royal family.
- Albert E. Sterner (1863-1946), British-American illustrator and painter, Autograph Letter Signed, to Kathleen S. Trowbridge, April 16, 1893.
- Walter Damrosch (1862-1950), German-American conductor and composer, Autograph Letter Signed, to Kathleen S. Trowbridge, February 1, 1890.
- First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962), Typed Letter Signed, January 20, 1949, to Mrs. Peal.
The volume also includes perhaps a half dozen more signatures that could not be deciphered.

Kathleen S. Trowbridge (1866-1957) was born in Massachusetts, the daughter of Charles F. Trowbridge (1837-1878) and Clara White Brigham Trowbridge. She became a widely known pianist in Detroit, Michigan. In later years, she lived with her sister in Virginia. She died on a visit to St. Augustine, Florida, and was buried in Detroit.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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