Skip to main content

This auction has ended. View lot details

You may also be interested in

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

Lot 6279

[MORSE, SAMUEL F.B. 1791-1872.]
Hide-covered and wrought iron-mounted wooden barrel-form stagecoach trunk,

17 February 2013, 09:00 PST
Los Angeles

US$15,000 - US$20,000

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Books & Manuscripts specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

[MORSE, SAMUEL F.B. 1791-1872.]

Hide-covered and wrought iron-mounted wooden barrel-form stagecoach trunk, 660 x 330 x 330 mm, hinged top opening to reveal newspaper lined interior; top with close-nailed initials "S M" (for Samuel Morse). Covering with loss and wear, leather strap perished, hinge weak, waterstains to interior; in need of some restoration.
Provenance: Samuel F.B. Morse; by descent to the present owner.

MORSE'S STAGECOACH TRUNK, USED BY HIM TO HOLD IMPORTANT PAPERS DURING HIS TRAVELS TO PROMOTE TRANSCONTINENTAL TELEGRAPHY. Samuel F.B. Morse [1791-1872] trained as an artist with an interest in the subject of electricity. He became interested in telegraphy in 1832 after overhearing a conversation about electromagnetism while traveling between Europe and America. The technology for the telegraph already existed at that time, but it was a cumbersome model requiring a different wire for each letter. Morse set about developing a system that would use only one wire for transmitting information. Next, he realized that the most effective way to transmit would be via a simple code of dots and dashes. His telegraph device was first exhibited in New York in 1838; by 1842 he convinced Congress to grant him $30,000 for further development. By 1844 he sent the first inter-city message ("What hath God wrought?") between Washington and Baltimore, and soon after the telegraph spread quickly across the continental United States, often following the paths established by the railways.
Family lore holds that this was Morse's personal stagecoach trunk, used to hold important papers during his travels. The trunk likely dates from the first quarter of the 19th century: the newsprint used to line the interior dates from approximately 1805 (with extensive coverage of Jefferson's treaty with the Choctaws).

Additional information

Bid now on these items

Signed to Spencer Tracy 1952 Hemingway, Ernest. 1899-1961. The Old Man and the Sea, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952.

A Presentation Copy of Kennedy's First Book to Spencer Tracy. Kennedy, John F. 1917-1963. Why England Slept. New York: Wilfred Funk, Inc., 1940.

ADVERTISING POSTERfor 'The Suffragette' newspaper, [c.1913-1914]

ILLUMINATED ADDRESS – CLARA CODD Illuminated printed address signed by Emmeline Pankhurst, [1909]

MUSIC & RECORDINGS – ETHEL SMYTH Collection of printed music, song sheets and records, [c.1911-1912]