FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY, OF A MEMOIR OF HECTOR TYNDALE, 1882, IN ORIGINAL CLOTH, WITH TIPPED-IN PRESENTATION SLIP FROM GENERAL TYNDALE’S WIFE
(TYNDALE, Hector) MCLAUGHLIN, John M. A Memoir of Hector Tyndale. Philadelphia: [Collins], 1882. Octavo, original brown cloth, patterned endpapers.
First edition, presentation copy, of this biography of a famous Union general who fought at Bull Run and Antietam, with frontispiece portrait and folding plan of the Battle of Wauhatchie, in original cloth. With presentation slip reading: “Compliments of Mrs. Hector Tyndale.”
The son of a prominent Philadelphia business who made his own fortune in the pottery and porcelain business, Hector Tyndale became involved in Republican politics before the War, failing to embrace abolition but nevertheless escorting the widow of John Brown to visit her husband and recover his body post-execution. When the Civil War began, Tyndale volunteered for the Union and soon became engaged in combat, fighting at the Second Battle of Bull Run and Antietam. He was wounded badly while in service and promoted to Brigadier General for his conspicuous service at Antietam. General Tyndale returned to command his brigade after Gettysburg. With the Union struggling at Chattanooga, Tyndale participated in battle one last time, before finally resigning on August 26, 1864 Tyndale resigned from the army due to poor health. He was brevetted to Major General on March 13, 1865. After the War, Tyndale returned to Philadelphia, where he ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 1868, but always remained happily in the porcelain business, eventually earning a place as one of the judges for the Centennial Exhibition.
Text fine, light rubbing to cloth. A near-fine presentation copy.