Manuscript Written And Signed By Sir Isaac Newton Realizes $118,750 In University Archives Online-Only Sale
August 06, 2021
A manuscript penned by Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727), with mathematical notes and calculations relating to Book III of his iconic scientific work Principia, changed hands for $118,750 in University Archives online-only auction of rare autographs, manuscripts, artwork and comic art held on May 26. It was the top-selling item of the 409 lots in the sale. Were still experiencing strong prices and keen new interests in many areas, said University Archives president and owner John Reznikoff. Weve sold over $3 million of items at auction so far this year, and we are not even at the halfway mark. This is another banner year. The rare and important two-page (front and back) manuscript, written by Newton ca. 1715-25, was believed to relate to Newtons De Mundi Systemate or Book III of the Principia. It was a set of mathematical notes containing several types of calculations and data points. One side was just calculations; the other side had a short note by Newton along with a calculation. The text of the note reads, in part, And that of Aldebaran and of Spica and that of Arcturus counting these longitudes not from the middes of the signes but from the Vernal Equinox/ And so of the rest of the fixed stars. Newton was referencing the longitudinal position of Aldebaran and other stars, plus data points relating to his revolutionary study of comets. Isaac Newton is widely recognized as one of the greatest mathematicians and most influential scientists of all time and was a key figure in the scientific revolution. In Principia, he formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation that formed the dominant scientific viewpoint (until it was superseded by Einsteins theory of relativity). Einstein was also featured in the auction. Items pertaining to Newton are exceedingly rare and highly sought after by collectors. The last time a Newton Principia related autograph manuscript came on the market was October 1999 and, before that, 1991 and 1979. Newton was a notorious hoarder of paper and of his own manuscripts; the preservation of this manuscript note was unusual even for him. Nearly all lots (396 of 409) found new owners, for a 97 percent sell-through and a total gross of $678,043. The 4,654 people who registered to bid on Invaluable.com and Auctionzip.com placed 1,224 bids, while the 4,239 people who registered to bid on LiveAuctioneers.com placed 596 bids. All prices quoted include the buyers premium. The items relating to Albert Einstein included a three-page scientific manuscript pertaining to his Unified Field Theory from the 1940s (I want to try to show that a truly natural choice for field equations exists); it sold for $68,750. A black and white photo signed by Einstein, taken in 1955 by photographer Yousuf Karsh, who said the image reveals the brief moment when all there is in a mans mind and soul and spirit are reflected through his eyes, his hands, his attitude, sold for $34,375. A Victorian era autograph album compiled by Pennsylvania Congressman William M. Davis that contained 226 signatures of Lincoln administration officials as well as members of the 37th U.S. Congress, including President Abraham Lincoln himself and seven of his eight cabinet members (Hamlin, Seward, Chase, Bates, Welles, Cameron and Smith), and the autographs of about 217 statesmen, including Lincolns eventual successor, Andrew Johnson, realized $37,500. A typed letter signed by Vladimir Lenin as Chairman of the Workers and Peasants Defense Council during the Russian Civil War was addressed to a future victim of Stalinist Purges, the Peoples Commissariat Artemic B. Khalatov. The letter, dated Dec. 19, 1919, was in Russian and typed in the Cyrillic alphabet. Lenin wished Khalatov a speedy recovery and a swift return to work. Ironically, Lenins successor, Josef Stalin, later ordered Khalatovs execution. It sold for $25,000. A one-page, partly printed ships paper dated Nov. 25, 1794, boldly signed by George Washington as president, issued to James Humphrey master or commander of the Sloop called Hiram, printed in three languages, brought $15,000. Also, a rare autograph letter signed by Woodrow Wilson as president on White House stationery, dated May 19, 1913, addressed to author and editor James Grant Wilson regarding the dedication of a U.S.S. Maine monument, fetched $13,750. An Act of Congress signed in type by George Washington as president and John Adams as vice president on May 8, 1794, permanently establishing the U.S. Postal Service and making robbing the mails a crime punishable by death, rose to $12,500. Also, a one-page autograph letter signed by the prominent British Methodist preacher John Wesley (1703-1791), written at Derby, England, on July 12, 1788, with content regarding a childrens school, brought $5,938. A two-page letter typed ad signed by author J.D. Salinger (as Jerry), dated May 5, 1972, in which he offers his thoughts on a dating interest of a friend and aspiring writer, Eileen Paddison, including the original Air Mail envelope, reached $8,125. Also, Beat writer Jack Kerouacs personal advance copy of The Twelfth Anniversary Playboy Reader (1965), gifted to Kerouac (as a contributor) by Hugh Hefner and accompanied by a typed letter signed by Hefner, sold for $8,125. An 8-by-10-inch photograph signed by Civil Rights icon Rosa Parks, showing Parks getting fingerprinted after her arrest in 1955 for not relinquishing her seat to a white person, signed in felt-tip pen on her sleeve, finished at $5,000, while three items related to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and its first president, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., including a letter in which King questions the wisdom of the Black Power slogan, sold for $4,375. An actual piece of fabric from the Wright Flyer, the first airplane that made its debut flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C., on Dec. 17, 1903, famously giving wings to mankind, 1.25-inch square in a CAG case, flew away for $6,875. Also, a map of Israel hand-drawn and signed by former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, drawn during the time of the 1993 Oslo Accords and providing detail to both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, hit $4,688. University Archives was founded in 1979, as a division of University Stamp Company, by John Reznikoff, who started collecting stamps and coins in 1968. Industry-wide, Reznikoff is considered an authenticity expert for manuscripts and documents. University Archives new offices are located at 88 Danbury Road, Suite 2A, in Wilton, Conn. For more information, call 203-454-0111 or visit www.universityarchives.com.
SHARE
PRINT