SIGNED BY GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE, HANDSOME VINTAGE ALBUMEN PRINT OF LEE IN UNIFORM, CIRCA 1865, FROM A PHOTOGRAPH BY MATHEW BRADY TAKEN ONLY DAYS AFTER APPOMATTOX AND THE DEATH OF LINCOLN
[BRADY, Mathew] LEE, Robert E. Photograph signed. Richmond, circa 1865. Vintage mounted oval albumen print (measures 9 by 7 inches), signed in inked manuscript hand on print recto at the lower edge of image. Beautifully framed, oval shaped frame is approximately 12 by 8 inches.
Rare vintage albumen print, circa 1865, of General Robert E. Lee, boldly signed by him in the lower portion of the image, from a photograph by Mathew Brady—“the “Father of American Photography”—a distinguished bust-length portrait of Lee in uniform taken on his porch in Richmond only days after Appomattox and the death of Lincoln from an assassin’s bullet.
This rare vintage albumen print of General Robert E. Lee, “perhaps the most revered of American soldiers” (Warner, 179), is from a photograph by famed photographer Mathew Brady, hailed in 1863 by Harper’s Weekly as the “Father of American Photography.” This bust-length portrait of Lee in uniform, boldly signed by him, was taken by Brady in April 1865, not long after Lee returned to Richmond after Appomattox. Lee entered the city on the 15th, the very day Lincoln died from a gunshot wound inflicted by John Wilkes Booth, and as Brady was “hurrying to Richmond over the same roads Lee had taken” (Meredith, 195). When Brady’s initial request for a photograph was refused, he sought the aid of General Ould, and “Brady was allowed exactly one hour to photograph the General. He felt that time would allow for about five pictures. The picture-taking was done on the back porch… Brady said, ‘There was little conversation during the sitting, but the General changed his position as often as I wished him to” (Meredith, 195-6). Later Brady spoke of the effort required to photograph “such men as Grant and Lee, at the greatest periods of rise or ruin… My energies were expended… in posing them well and in completing the likeness” (Panzer, 225).
A handsome signed vintage print, with Lee’s image and bold signature clearly defined.