Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 16

The Life of Francis Marion by Simms, 1855

About the Item

Presenting a very rare eleventh edition hardback illustrated copy of The Life of Francis Marion W. Gilmore Simms. J.C. Derby 119 Nassau Street, New York in 1855. The First Edition was released in 1844. This extremely rare book is in fair condition with some minor fraying and wear to the green cloth cover(s) ans spine(s), some loss of gilt work on the cover, some foxing, but otherwise good for it's age. It has all the attached illustrations. This book was part of the extensive private collection of the Calvert Hall/Obenchain/Godwin/McMillan Collection formerly of Virginia, Bowling Green, KY and later, Highland Park, Texas. AS you can see from the history of this Collection (see our PDF) the family have very strong ancestral ties to the States of Virginia, Kentucky and Texas. BY WAY OF ADDED BONUS .... THIS BOOK WAS OWNED BY John Duncan McMillan, WHO was an important early figure in Texas and whose family settled in the Waxahachie area of Ellis County and he has signed it and dated it October 1856. This is a RARE Early Edition American Book !! W. GILMORE SIMMS: A significant aim throughout Simms’s work is to provide South Carolina, and the South generally, with pride of place in the emergence of the American nation, its people, and their national character.  Simms does this work largely through his narration of the Revolutionary War in South Carolina, the focus of numerous romances, histories, and other works.  One such work is The Life of Francis Marion, a biography of the legendary “Swamp Fox.”  Simms’s interest in Marion is pronounced, as the famous general appears in several of the revolutionary romances; while flawed at times, Simms’s biography was influential in shaping subsequent perceptions of Marion. .The Letters indicate that Simms was thinking of taking up the biography genre by early 1840, as he told James Lawson in April of that year that he was “meditating and taking notes for several Biographies—say Marion, Sumter, Pickens, Moultrie &c.—worthies of Carolina Revolutionary History.”  That September, he announced that he was “taking notes for my life of Green [sic] and Marion.” Though he had been quite productive in other genres in the intervening three years, by October 1843 Simms was still merely “taking notes for a new Life of Marion.”  However, he soon began writing the biography in earnest, telling Lawson in mid-November that he had contracted the work, and was to have it to the publisher by February of the following year.  Nevertheless, the biography was not completed by February, and the writer noted in March 1844 that he had “prepared 300 MS. pages of my life of Marion.  It will need 200 more.” The work was finished sometime later that year, and a first edition was published by Henry G. Langley by November 1844.  Simms was unhappy with this edition, as it suffered from a lack of corrections and editing; he lamented to George Frederick Holmes that “I fear that this [edition of Marion that Holmes may have been reading] is the first edition which is lamentably full of errors.  Should it be so, you must not charge to my account whatever may be fairly ascribable to the printers.  Entire pages have been left uncorrected which in proof were sometimes almost rewritten.”  Despite this early frustration, this issue was soon corrected, and The Life of Francis Marion was met with praise amongst reviewers and sold well.  By late 1846, Simms had become dissatisfied with his relationship with Langley, and wanted to have Marion published by other houses.  Letters to Lawson from late 1846 and throughout 1847 show the author considering maneuvers that would force Langley to release Marion, so that the work could be published by another firm.  Simms eventually succeeded, and the biography was published by several different houses in the following years, including Geo. F. Cooledge & Brother; Phillips, Sampson & Co.; J.C. Derby; John Philbrick; Derby & Jackson; and G.G. Evans. The Life of Francis Marion was popular and generally well-received during Simms’s life, going through at least ten editions between 1844 and 1860.  Yet, for most of the twentieth century, the work was lightly regarded; writing in 1992, Simms biographer John Caldwell Guilds notes that the work is “now all-but-forgotten.”  However, recent years have seen a resurgence in scholarly interest in Marion.  Recent scholars have rediscovered the work and begun to reconsider its merits as both an historical document and a work of literature. Steven D. Smith’s “Imagining the Swamp Fox:  William Gilmore Simms and the National Memory of Francis Marion” is perhaps the most robust recent treatment of Simms’s biography.  Smith demonstrates that Simms’s goal in writing the biography was to show Marion as a Washington-like figure who should be understood as exemplifying the best, foundational aspects of the national character, as well as to push back against the two earlier biographical treatments of Marion, by Mason Locke Weems and William Dobein James.  Smith notes that Simms “disparaged both Weems and James,” as the former misused facts about Marion’s life while the latter wrote a biography of no literary merit.  For Simms the writer, the artistic merits of an historical work were at least as important as their historicity; thus his impetus for this biography.  Despite The Life of Francis Marion being “full of Weems-like flowery speeches and James’s confusions,” Smith contends that we must understand this project by seeing “Simms as he saw himself—as a deconstructionist of Weems’s mythology but with a literary heart.”  Historian Sean Busick deems Simms’s biography a valuable historical work, since the writer preserves documentary materials, such as a now-lost memoir by Lt. Peter Horry, and oral histories that would otherwise be unavailable to contemporary scholars.  Furthermore, Busick commends the historical content of the work, noting that Marion “shows a close attention to fairness and truthfulness.  Indeed, Simms paints a far more balanced picture of the Revolution than many historians before or since.” Francis Marion was the main inspiration behind the character of Benjamin Martin (lead) and played by Mel Gibson in the movie ..."The Patriot".
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 7.6 in (19.31 cm)Width: 5.25 in (13.34 cm)Depth: 1.25 in (3.18 cm)
  • Style:
    American Classical (Of the Period)
  • Materials and Techniques:
    Paper,Engraved
  • Place of Origin:
  • Period:
  • Date of Manufacture:
    1855
  • Condition:
    Wear consistent with age and use. Minor losses. Minor structural damages. Minor fading. Fair ORIGINAL CONDITION.
  • Seller Location:
    Dallas, TX
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU3978119510092
More From This SellerView All
  • The Life Record of HW Graber Texas Ranger Dedicated First Edition
    Located in Dallas, TX
    Presenting a very rare first edition hardback copy of The Life Record of H.W. Grabber, A Terry Texas Ranger 1861-1865 Sixty-Two Years in Texas. Copyright ...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American American Classical Books

    Materials

    Paper

  • Sketches of North Carolina by Rev WH Foote
    Located in Dallas, TX
    Presenting a rare book, namely, Sketches of North Carolina by Rev WH Foote. Titled: “Sketches of North Carolina, Historical and Biographical, Illustrative of the principles of a p...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American American Classical Books

    Materials

    Paper

  • Epic of America by Jt Adams First Edition Re-Print
    Located in Dallas, TX
    PRESENTING A RARE EDITION hardback copy of The Epic of America by James Truslow Adams, Illustrated by M.J. Gallagher, Published by Little, Brown and Company of Boston in 1932. Con...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American American Classical Books

    Materials

    Paper

  • Rural and Domestic Life of Germany by Howitt, 1842
    Located in Dallas, TX
    Presenting an extremely rare first edition hardback copy of The Rural and Domestic Life of Germany with Characteristic Sketches of its Cities and Scenery, Collected in a General Tour...
    Category

    Antique Mid-19th Century English Country Books

    Materials

    Paper

  • Important Teddy Roosevelt Letter of January 1918
    By Theodore Roosevelt
    Located in Dallas, TX
    Presenting a very important Teddy Roosevelt letter of January 1918. On ‘Sagamore Hill’ letterhead. Fully handwritten and personally signed by President...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American American Classical Historical Memorabilia

    Materials

    Paper

  • Important Teddy Roosevelt Letter of June, 1911
    By Theodore Roosevelt
    Located in Dallas, TX
    Presenting a very important Teddy Roosevelt Letter of June 1911 . On ‘The Outlook’ letterhead. Typed and personally signed and amended by President Theodore Roosevelt. Dated June 20th 1911. What makes this letter so important is the author, the office and the content. It refers to the beliefs and opinions of the then President and First Lady (Edith) towards the women’s sufferage and empowerment movement that was the ‘hot topic’ of the time. It is addressed to Eliza Calvert Hall/Obenchain who was a well known author at the end of the 19th Century and Early 20th Century. In 1905, Teddy referred to her book “Aunt Jane of Kentucky’ in a speech and recommended that every man in America should read it to understand ‘the plight of their womenfolk’. He regularly corresponded with her and we have a number of those letters in our collection. It appears that both he and Edith became big fans of Mrs Hall/Obenchain who was also heavily involved in the Suffragist movement. The letters also provide a fascinating and historic record of Roosevelt’s personal beliefs and feelings on female empowerment. The Letter Reads: The Outlook 287 Fourth Avenue New York Office of Theodore Roosevelt June 20th, 1911 “My dear Miss Hall: I am touched by your sending me “To Love and To Cherish”. But then, I am one of those included in the dedication, for I well know and dearly love ” Aunt Jane of Kentucky”. Mrs. Roosevelt and I do not feel that the hero ought to have yielded to his wife’s feelings ! Ultimately it was doing an injustice to her and to his children, as well as to the State. It is a good thing to have a Governor’s wife a woman who can be as gracious a hostess, and of as fine a type, as Dolly Madison...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American American Classical Historical Memorabilia

    Materials

    Paper

You May Also Like
  • Cooke Troughton & Simms Theodolite
    Located in Hamilton, Ontario
    Cooke Troughton & Simms Theodolite in fitted mahogany case.
    Category

    Early 20th Century English Scientific Instruments

    Materials

    Brass

  • The Well-lived Life: One Hundred Years of House & Garden
    By Assouline Publishing
    Located in North Hollywood, CA
    The Well-lived Life: One Hundred Years of House & Garden by Dominique Browning. Assouline Publishing, Inc. 2008. Large hardcover coffee table book. Size: 12 1/8" x 9 1/2" x 1" 1/4. House & Home - 238 pages. Few magazines can lay claim to a century of history or to having published work by some extraordinary and distinguished photographers and writers as House & Garden. Now, straight from the pages of this well-loved periodical, The Well-Lived Life presents a lavish chronicle of a country and a culture coming into its own, documenting America's continuing education in matters of house, home and garden over the course of the 20th century. Selecting high points from the magazine, this book surveys the growing confidence and imagination reflected in American interiors and entertaining over the last century -the dinners, picnics and parties of a country dedicated to welcoming others- and the changing definition of home. It also illuminates the joys -sedentary or sporting- Americans have always found in the out-of-doors. The Well-Lived Life surveys the landscape of our lawns and gardens...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American American Classical Books

    Materials

    Paper

  • Antique Map of The Asian Continent, 1855
    Located in Langweer, NL
    Antique map titled 'Carte Générale de l 'Asie'. Beautiful map of the Asian continent. This map originates from 'Voyage en Asie et en Afrique, d'aprés les récits des derniers voyageur...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Maps

    Materials

    Paper

  • Brass Surveyors Level by Troughton & Simms, London
    By Troughton & Simms London
    Located in Norwich, GB
    Brass Surveyors Level by Troughton & Simms, London Sixteen inch extending telescope with original lacquer finish and spirit level. The compass ha...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century British Victorian Scientific Instruments

    Materials

    Brass

  • Antique Map of the Netherlands in 1648 by Mees, 1855
    Located in Langweer, NL
    Antique map titled 'Noord-Nederland in 1648. De gevestigde Republiek der Vereenigde Nederlanden'. Map of the Netherlands in 1648. This map originates from 'Historische Atlas van Noor...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Maps

    Materials

    Paper

  • Antique Map of the Northern Part of South America by Fullarton, 1855
    Located in Langweer, NL
    Antique map titled 'South American States, New Granada & Venezuela'. Detailed map of the northern part of South America. With a small inset map of Panama. Originates from the 'Royal ...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Maps

    Materials

    Paper

Recently Viewed

View All