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Joining the 1849 overland trek of Audubon's son to
Joining the 1849 overland trek of Audubon's son to
Item Details
Description
Heading: (California Gold Rush, ill-fated Audubon trek, 1849)
Author:
Title: Life insurance for a Forty-Niner who joined Audubon's son on a famously ill-fated overland trek to California
Place Published:
Publisher:
Date Published: 1849
Description:


J.W. Judd. Autograph Letter Signed. New York, Jan. 29, 1849. 1pg.+ stampless address leaf. To Guy R. Phelps, [Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co.], Hartford, Connecticut.



"Langdon H. Havens wants a [life insurance] permit for California to go over the Overland Route in company with persons bearing dispatches from our Government, in a Company of 100 or more. He wants to leave for Washington immediately..." Perhaps the 26 year-old Haven (sometimes spelled Havens) originally intended to join a safe government-sponsored expedition from Washington - but he was in fact among the 100 Forty-Niners of a famously ill-fated overland expedition, led by Army Colonel Henry Webb, with John Woodhouse Audubon, son of the famous ornithologist, as his second in command, which left New York on February 8.


The company proceeded by ship, train, stagecoach and riverboat to New Orleans and from there by steamer across the Gulf of Mexico to the mouth of the Rio Grande, where they arrived on March 13 - an odd overland route dictated by Webb, a veteran of the Mexican War. There disaster struck. A dozen men died of cholera, the company's money was stolen, and leadership conflict led Webb to leave the company with a dozen followers. Some of the remaining stalwarts, including Haven followed Audubon onward, trekking for seven months through Mexico and Arizona, the survivors finally reaching San Diego in November. Some then took a boat to San Francisco; others continued overland to the gold fields. As meticulously recorded by Audubon, a naturalist and painter in his own right, the entire venture has gone down in history as "one of the most poorly-planned" Forty-Niner expeditions "on record". Haven, though nearly dying en route, was one of the fortunate few who "made it to California."

Condition
Some edge coloration.
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Joining the 1849 overland trek of Audubon's son to

Estimate $300 - $400
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Starting Price $150
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