Rare Americana & Cartography With the Robert M. Ebiner Zamorano 80 Collection on February 20th

PBA Galleries invites bidders to join them on Thursday, February 20th at 11:00am for a sale of Rare Americana & Cartography, with the Robert M. Ebiner Zamorano 80 Collection. The auction will feature over 500 lots of rare and historically significant material on the Americas, ranging from cornerstones of California history to cartographic delineation of twentieth century development, with books, manuscripts, photographs, ephemera, maps, and atlases. Included is the Robert M. Ebiner Zamorano 80 Collection, a selection of key books in a library of California; a range of books on or by presidents of the United States; books, pamphlets, maps and historical atlases on California local history, and that of other states; and much more.

First edition of Two Years Before the Mast

19th-century maps, rare books, and ephemera feature prominently in the auction. In a rare, apparently unrecorded issue of John Melish’s 1818 map of the United States, Illinois is properly abutting Lake Michigan, not connected by a rectangular offset of land as with other known copies ($3,000-$5,000). A Black Hills expense report for telegraph usage signed by George Armstrong Custer is dated “Bismarck, Dakota Territory, 1875.” The report is countersigned by the telegraph operator who would later break the news to the world of Custer’s death at the Battle of the Little Big Horn ($6,000-$9,000). A first edition of Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana (1840) will be offered in the first edition, first issue. The exceptional copy is in the preferred tan muslin binding and expertly rebacked with the original spine strip employed ($5,000-$8,000). From 1881, a handwritten letter from Tombstone dates to just two months after the gunfight at OK Corral. The note from Tombstone Justice of the Peace Mike Grey is addressed to James W. Denver, of the eponymous city. Grey asks that he mention to “proper authorities” the importance of establishing a military post along the Mexican border where Arizona and New Mexico meet ($1,500-$2,500).

Paloú’s Life of Father Serra, 1787

In Californiana, Francisco  Paloú’s Relacion Historica de la Vida Y Apostolicas Tareas of Father Junipero Serra, founder of the California missions, has been called the “most extensive early work on upper California. PBA will offer a fine 1787 first edition in the original full vellum ($10,000-$15,000). From the 20th century, a rare folding bird’s-eye view of Los Angeles is presented in Los Angeles 1909. The spectacular street map of the sprawling city and the surrounding area is in the original paper wrappers ($2,000-$3,000).

Early American ephemera and artwork are well-represented in the sale. A rare printed broadside proclamation issued by John Adams (1799) marks the period of a rampant yellow fever plague, calling for a “day of solemn humiliation, fasting, and prayer” ($4,000-$6,000). A collection of 119 patriotic envelopes from the Civil War feature captivating illustrations. Some of the envelopes are printed in color, and all display compelling graphic propaganda for the Union cause ($3,000-$5,000). A rare lithograph of the Declaration of Independence in calligraphy by William H. Pratt was designed to form a portrait of George Washington. The portrait was lithographed by August Hagenboeck in Davenport, Iowa in 1865 ($5,000-$8,000). The sale will begin at 11:00 am Pacific Time and the public may preview the auction in Berkeley at PBA Galleries (605 Addison Street, Berkeley, California) on Tuesday, February 18th or Wednesday, February 19th from 9:00am-5:00pm and Thursday, February 20th from 9:00am-11:00am.  For more information, please contact the galleries at (415) 989-2665 or [email protected].