Button Gwinnett - A Klos Family Project
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GWINNETT, Button
(1735-1777), Signer (Georgia). Document signed ("Button Gwinnett")
as a Subscriber of the Charity School of Wolverhampton, countersigned by several
other subscribers and Trustees. [Wolverhampton, England, ca. 3 September 1761]. 2
pages, oblong 8vo (7 1/8 x 9 1/8 in.). Very fine condition.
A FUTURE SIGNER AS PHILANTHROPIST: A DOCUMENT SIGNED BY GEORGIA'S BUTTON
GWINNETT, RAREST OF THE SIGNERS OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
An exceptionally attractive document--very likely the finest Gwinnett still in
private hands--relating to the operation of the Wolverhampton Charity School,
bearing a large clear signature of the young Button Gwinnett as one of its
supporters. It records financial details, the admission of new pupils, and the
fact that one of the school's wards had been bound as apprentice to a
buckle-maker. Beneath the signatures of Gwinnett and his colleagues it is
recorded that at the said date, the Charity Boys school had 35 students
enrolled, the Charity Girls school 26.
It is oddly ironic that Gwinnett, who left few written records on either side of
the Atlantic, has attained a high degree of recognition--at least among
collectors--based on the extreme rarity of his signature rather than any
particularly crucial role in the achievement of American independence. Little is
known of his early life. Born in Down Hatherly, Gloucestershire, Gwinnett
established himself in Bristol as a merchant, then emigrated to the American
colonies, settling first in Charleston, S.C., and later in Savannah, Georgia. In
October 1765 he purchased a large tract of land on St. Catherine's Island, which
he intended to develop as a plantation. He became friendly with patriot Lyman
Hall, a neighbor, and active in the independence movement. In January 1776 he
attended a meeting of the Georgia Council of Safety and was selected as one of
Georgia's five delegates to the Continental Congress. Taking his seat in May, he
was present for the vote for independence on July 2, and with his fellow
delegates, signed the Declaration of Independence. His service, in Congress,
though, was relatively brief, and after returning to Savannah in August he
served as Speaker of the Georgia Assembly, played a part in the drafting of the
state Constitution and helped quash a move to make Georgia a part of South
Carolina. On the death of Governor Bulloch in March 1777, Gwinnett became
President of the state of Georgia and Commander-in-Chief, but failed to win
re-election. A long-simmering antipathy between Gwinnett and fellow patriot
Lachlan M'Intosh culminated in a fateful duel, fought on May 17, 1777 in which
both men were wounded. Gwinnett succumbed to his injuries on May 25 at the age
of forty-five, further ensuring the rarity of his documents. His activities in
support of the patriot cause resulted in the total destruction of his property
during the British occupation of Savannah and surrounding areas.
Gwinnett's signature, perceived as rare since the era of Lyman Draper and the
earliest collectors of the Signers, has become increasingly so in the last two
decades, as many complete sets of the 56 Signers have passed into permanent
institutional collections. (At least one other example, presently in a private
collection, is also destined for a noted university rare book collection.) It is
highly unlikely that any additional previously unrecorded Gwinnett letters or
documents will come to light. Since 1980, only four other examples of Gwinnett's
signature have been offered individually at auction:
1. Signature, undated, on a small irregular piece of paper, damaged, with
serious lacunae and considerable restoration. The Marshall Coyne Collection
(sale, Sotheby's, 5 June 2001, lot 107, $110,000).
2. Partly printed document signed, 9 July 1774. From the former Bamberger set
(sale, Superior Galleries, Los Angeles, 6 November 1993, lot 311, $150,000).
3. Document signed, 19 Feb. 1773, a receipt (sale, Sotheby's, 22 May 1990, lot
38, $135,000).
4. Letter signed by Gwinnett and five other members of the Marine Committee of
Congress, 12 July 1776. The Carrie Estelle Doheny Collection (sale, Christie's
22 February 1989, lot 2168, $190,000).
The standard census of Gwinnett documents--now considerably out of
date--recorded a total of 46 examples, not including the present example, which
is similar in nature to three other documents from the Wolverhampton Charity
School, also dated 1761 (see Fields' nos.27,37 and 39). Those three examples
were discovered in May 1927 by a local historian and subsequently sold by the
Trustees of the School to endow scholarships. Joseph E. Fields, "The Known
Signatures of Button Gwinnett," in The New Colophon, vol.3 (1950),
pp.132-145.
Provenance: Philip D. Sang (sale, Sotheby Parke Bernet, 26 April 1978,
lot 262, illustrated, part of a set of Signers' documents).
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