Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission For Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command - Apr 10, 2024 | University Archives In Ct
LiveAuctioneers Logo

lots of lots

Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission for Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command

Related Presidential & First Lady Memorabilia

More Items in Presidential & First Lady Memorabilia

View More

Recommended Historical Memorabilia

View More
item-174193186=1
item-174193186=2
item-174193186=3
item-174193186=4
item-174193186=5
item-174193186=6
item-174193186=7
Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission for Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command
Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission for Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command
Item Details
Description
Abraham Lincoln
Washington, DC, July 1, 1864
Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission for Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command
Partially printed DS

ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Partially Printed Document Signed, Commission of Robert H. K. Whiteley as Lieutenant Colonel in the Ordnance Department, July 1, 1864. 1 p., 15" x 18.5"; framed to 40" x 30.5". Also signed by Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. Blind embossed paper seal; matted and framed with a lithograph of Lincoln by J. C. Buttre from a photograph by Mathew Brady. Expected folds; very good.

President Abraham Lincoln signed this commission for Robert H. K. Whiteley as a Lieutenant Colonel in the Ordnance Department on July 1, 1864, effective on June 1, 1863. Whiteley was promoted from major to lieutenant colonel in the Ordnance Department of the Regular Army to replace Lieutenant Colonel George D. Ramsay, who had been promoted to colonel. On December 31, 1863, Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton proposed Whiteley?s promotion among scores of other appointments and promotions to President Abraham Lincoln, who forwarded them the same day to the U.S. Senate with his approval. The Senate finally consented to Whiteley?s promotion, among those of many others, on May 28, 1864.

Excerpt
?Know Ye, That reposing special trust and confidence in the patriotism, valor, fidelity, and abilities of Robert H. K. Whiteley I have nominated, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, do appoint him Lieutenant Colonel in the Ordnance Department in the service of the United States: to rank as such from the First day of June eighteen hundred and Sixty three. He is therefore carefully and diligently to discharge the duty of Lieutenant Colonel by doing and performing all manner of things thereunto belonging.?

Historical Background
Built in 1814 from a design by Benjamin Latrobe, the Allegheny Arsenal in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, contained a military store, stables, a powder magazine, an arms magazine, a blacksmith shop, officer?s quarters, barracks, and assorted other buildings by the mid-1930s. In December 1860, Secretary of War John B. Floyd issued a controversial order to Major John Symington at the Allegheny Arsenal to ship one hundred 20-pound cannon to two gulf forts under construction at Biloxi, Mississippi, and Galveston, Texas. The local Pittsburgh Gazette declared on December 25, 1860: ?These facts go to show conclusively the treasonable purpose of the administration. Every Northern Arsenal has been stripped of arms and ordnance, and every Southern Arsenal crammed full and left in such condition as to give the Secessionists a chance to capture them, and provide themselves thoroughly with the accoutrements of war, at the expense of the government.... The traitors of the South are thus being furnished by a government in league with them with all the ammunitions of war.? A mass meeting decided to inform President James Buchanan of the proposed shipments, and Buchanan countermanded the order. An enraged Floyd resigned on December 29 and later joined the Confederacy as a general.

When the war began, the Allegheny Arsenal was under pressure to increase production. When matches were discovered repeatedly among the bundles of cartridges, Symington dismissed some two hundred ?boys? working there and replaced them with ?females.?

On September 17, 1862, the same day as the Battle of Antietam in Maryland, two explosions ripped through one of the laboratories at the Allegheny Arsenal where cartridges were being loaded. In the worst civilian disaster of the Civil War, 78 people, mostly teenage girls, were killed, and many more were injured. Among those killed was thirteen-year-old Catherine McBride, the daughter of the supervisor of the munitions laboratory. At the time of the explosions, 156 people were working in the laboratory, and approximately 1,100 were working at the Allegheny Arsenal overall.

In February 1863, Major Robert H. K. Whiteley reported that two presses at the Arsenal could produce 40,000 bullets per day. However, the manufacture of small arms cartridges would have to cease soon for ?want of storeroom.? He reported that he had at that moment 8 million cartridges ?stored in a leaky frame shed, by no means safe from accident by fire.?

Late in 1864, while Lieutenant Colonel Whiteley was on leave, a captain and some supervisors told the employees of the Allegheny Arsenal that anyone who voted for McClellan over Lincoln was a traitor and would be subject to dismissal the day after the election. Fourteen employees sent a letter of protest to a local newspaper.

Manufacturing at the Allegheny Arsenal ceased a few years after the Civil War ended, but the Arsenal remained in operation until 1926.

Robert Henry Kirkwood Whiteley (1809-1896) was born in Maryland and graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1830. That same year, he married Hester Dodson (1808-1886), with whom he had at least eight children. He was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant in the 2nd Artillery and served during the Seminole War in Florida. In 1838, he escorted a detachment of Cherokee from northern Alabama, via water, to Indian Territory (Oklahoma), in what became known as the Trail of Tears. He was promoted to captain in 1842. During the Mexican War, he served in the ordnance department at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and armed regiments on their way to Mexico. After the Mexican War, he commanded the arsenal at San Antonio, Texas, until the beginning of the Civil War. He was offered a command in the Confederate Army but declined it and instead worked arsenals in the North throughout the war. He was promoted to major on August 3, 1861, commanded the New York Arsenal until October 1862, and transferred in November 1862 to the Allegheny Arsenal, which he commanded until retiring from the army in 1875. In addition to this promotion to lieutenant colonel in 1864, he was promoted to colonel in 1866. He retired with the rank of brevet brigadier-general. He moved to Baltimore, where he lived for the remainder of his life.

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.

WE PROVIDE IN-HOUSE SHIPPING WORLDWIDE.
15 x 18 1/2 in. (38.1 x 47 cm.), Frame: 40 x 30 1/2 in. (101.6 x 77.5 cm.)
Provenance: JSA LOA
Buyer's Premium
  • 28%

Abraham Lincoln Signs Commission for Ordnance Officer Who Turned Down Confederate Command

Estimate $6,000 - $8,000
See Sold Price
Starting Price $2,000
20 bidders are watching this item.

Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Wilton, CT, us
Offers In-House Shipping
Local Pickup Available

Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers

University Archives

University Archives

badge TOP RATED
Wilton, CT, United States2,863 Followers
Auction Curated By
John Reznikoff
President
TOP