Description

Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover (2) Signatures Two fountain pen signatures, "Herbert Hoover" and "Yours sincerely, Lou Henry Hoover," on individual slips, measuring 3 x 2.25 and 5.5 x 2. In very fine condition. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope and a transmittal letter from Hoover's assistant, George Akerson, dated November 19, 1928.

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Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover (2) Signatures

Estimate 200 - 400 USD
Starting price 200 USD

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 25 %
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For sale on Wednesday 11 Sep - 18:00 (EDT)
amherst, United States
RR Auction
+16037324284
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Warren G. Harding Autograph Letter Signed as President, Writing to Herbert Hoover on Russian Relief Efforts Rare ALS as president, one page, 5 x 8, embossed White House letterhead, no date [1921-1923]. Handwritten letter to future American President Herbert Hoover, then serving as the U.S. Secretary of Commerce, in full: “My Dear Secy Hoover, This note will be presented to you by Major Stanley Washburn, who knows Russia well, and has some ideas about the relief and its effects which I would like him to present to you.” In fine condition, with two file holes, a light paperclip impression, and some old erasures in the bottom blank area. A content-rich letter from Harding to Hoover, whose support of the sitting president during the 1920 election season resulted in his appointment to Harding’s cabinet as Secretary of Commerce, a role befitting of Hoover’s talents given his experience during World War I as the director of the United States Food Administration. Although WWI concluded in November 1918, Europe continued to face a critical food situation with the threat of millions dying from starvation. As such, the United States Food Administration became the American Relief Administration (ARA), and Hoover was charged with providing food to Central and Eastern Europe. Against the opposition of Henry Cabot Lodge and other Senate Republicans, Hoover provided aid to the defeated German nation after the war, as well as relief to the famine-stricken Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. The Russian famine of 1921-22 claimed six million people, but the intervention of the ARA likely saved millions of lives. When a critic inquired if he was not thus helping Bolshevism, Hoover retorted, ‘Twenty million people are starving. Whatever their politics, they shall be fed!’ Harding is a great rarity in autograph letters as president, especially of such postwar historical content and presidential associations.