Apr 17, 2012 - Sale 2276

Sale 2276 - Lot 211

Price Realized: $ 6,240
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 3,500 - $ 5,000
SOUTH SHOULD ATTEND TO OWN AFFAIRS AND STAY OUT OF NATIONAL POLITICS LEE, ROBERT E. Autograph Letter Signed, "R ELee," to General Edward G.W. Butler, reporting that his gift of pecans has been enjoyed by family and friends, expressing concern regarding the health of George Williamson, suggesting that he plant corn on his plantation, warning of the consequences of overproducing cotton and sugar, claiming that the South would not have failed in asserting its view of the Constitution had its population and resources been adequately developed, predicting that the South will not recover until it does so, promising to send a copy of his own father's memoirs, expressing hope that his children would find memorable advice in his own father's letters to his own brother [Charles Carter Lee], scolding his cousin for being out too late and remarking that the winter has been unusually mild. 5 pages, 8vo, written on a folded sheet and one side of an additional leaf, ruled paper. With the original envelope, addressed in his hand. (AKF) Lexington, 10 February 1870

Additional Details

". . . I am more than ever impressed with the necessity of the people of the South attending to their material prosperity; building up their individual fortunes; taking care less of Federal politics, & more of their own affairs. Had this course been followed from the beginning of the government; had the resources of the States been fully developed, & the white population been increased to the extent it might; the Southern Construction of the Constitution, & its views of Federal politics, would have been listened to with that attention which its weight in the Councils of the nation entitled it to. It was from the want of this weight . . . that it failed, when it attempted to maintain its views. Nor will it ever recover its position in the Republic until its material interests are sufficiently enlarged, & its population adequately increased. . . ."