Kenneth W. Rendell: The World’s Preeminent Dealer in Historical Letters, Autographs, Historical Documents, and Manuscripts

Women Autographs

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VICTORIA
[VICTORIA]. Queen of England. Partly engraved Document, one page, folio [20 1/2 by 30 1/2 inches], on vellum, March 30, 1874. Letters patent for an Invention. Fine condition.
$4,500
[VICTORIA].
[VICTORIA]. Queen of England. Partly engraved Document, two pages, folio, on vellum, May 14, 1869. Letters patent for an Invention.
$5,500
MARIAN ANDERSON.
Autograph Letter Signed, two pages, quarto, February 5, 1943. On imprinted stationery, Canadian Pacific Hotels, Empress Hotel, Victoria, B.C. To "Dear Madame Gautier:"

"Just about two weeks ago during my stay in Nashville, I had a ...
$1,750

MARIAN ANDERSON.
Lovely formal bust portrait photograph of the singer, smiling and ready to sing, signed across her shoulders in the light part of her dress, undated. The photograph measures 3 / inches wide by 5 inches ...
$3,500
ANNE.
Document Signed, Anne R, one page, folio, [9 by 13 1/2 inches], on vellum, Windsor, August 2, 1709.
$4,500
ANNE.
Letter Signed, Good cousin and friend / and good sister, cousin,/ and friend / AnnaR, two and two-thirds pages, tall quarto, Given at Our Palace at Windsor, July 3, 1709. Countersigned by H. Boyle. To ...
$12,500
SUSAN B. ANTHONY.
Autograph Letter Signed, one page, octavo, February 5, 1885. On imprinted stationery of the National Woman Suffrage Association, to "My Dear Sir".

"It is for the establishment of perfect equality of rights for Women-civil and political-that ...
$20,000

SUSAN B. ANTHONY
Autograph Letter Signed twice, initials, at the conclusion of the letter and after the postscript, five pages, octavo, Rochester, New York, May 31, 1873. To Mrs. Davis, who was apparently acting as treasurer of the ...
$15,000
ASTAIRE & ROGERS.
Two very fine signed studio photographs of pair, framed as an ensemble.
$2,500
JOSEPHINE BAKER.
Beguiling Signed postcard Photograph, "Souvenir de Josephine Baker / 1936," measuring 3 1/4 inches wide by 4 3/4 inches high. The Folies Begere star, at the height of her popularity in 1936, is seen in ...
$2,500
JOSEPHINE BAKER.
Signed postcard Photograph, "Josephine Baker," measuring 3 1/4 inches wide by 4 3/4 inches high. A full-length portrait of La Baker wearing a thirties style evening gown with a sumptuous fur thrown over her right ...
$1,750
JOSEPHINE BAKER.
Signed Photograph, "A Monsieur Deyrmont / En souvenir de / Josephine Baker / Paris 1931," of the chanteuse striking a theatrical pose wearing a skimpy beaded outfit with enormous earrings and a huge fan tail ...
$4,500
SIMONE de BEAUVOIR.
Autograph Letter Signed, S de Beauvoir, one and one-third pages, quarto, undated. To an unnamed Madame. Fine condition.
$3,500
SARAH BERNHARDT.
BERNHARDT, Sarah. French actress. Splendid half-length signed photograph of the Divine Sarah wearing a richly embroidered gown and a fur coat and hat, inscribed signed and dated, 1910
$3,750
LIZZIE A. BORDEN.
Autograph Letter Signed, L.A. Borden, two full pages, small octavo, Fall River, Massachusetts, December 9, 1896.
$25,000
ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING and ROBERT BROWNING.
Autograph Note Signed, one page, octavo, London, October 21, 1856. On card stock, to the Women's Hospital in New York. Written in the hand of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Robert Browning adds the place and date, ...
$15,000
ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
Sensitive early photograph, of a portrait, of the author of Aurora Leigh, signed Elizabeth Barrett Browning on the lower mount.
$35,000
ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
Autograph Letter Signed, two pages, octavo, 43 via Bocca di Leone [Rome], Friday, undated. To "My dear Reverend Hanna." With the original black-bordered mourning envelope addressed in her hand.
$12,500
PEARL S. BUCK.
Typewritten Manuscript, seven full pages, quarto, undated. Buck's speech, concerning relations between the United States and the Asian countries and her peoples, is heavily revised and corrected by the author in ink and pencil [these ...
$2,500
BURNS & ALLEN. George Burns and Gracie Allen.
Document Signed, two pages, folio, [16 1/2 by 10 1/2 inches], August 6, 1949.
$4,500
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Celebrity Female Signatures

Women autographs, signatures, signed letters, and signed documents of famous women in many different fields of endeavor are avidly collected.  Discussed here are women whose autograph signatures and signed pieces have been collected in part because they are women, as opposed to women whose autograph material has been of interest because of their accomplishments alone, for example, authors.  (Many of these authors are discussed in the section entitled “Authors.”)  The leading figure in the women's rights movement, Susan B. Anthony, pioneered the movement to establish every woman’s the right to vote in the United States.  Susan B. Anthony's signed letters have long been collected by a university library in New York, though signed letters do occasionally become available on the market.  Susan B. Anthony was a popular figure who was very happy to sign her autograph on cards, and these are the most common form available for admirers and collectors today.  Amelia Earhart was a very popular public figure as a pioneer in aviation, and while she readily signed her autograph on cards when people encountered her in person, they are clearly scarce, as the demand for her autograph signature exceeds the supply.  In the field of science, the French chemist Marie Curie, known for her work in radioactivity, is very rare, and autograph signatures and signed letters have been collected by institutional libraries for decades; accordingly, her autograph signatures are rarely found.  Mary Cassatt, the great Impressionist artist, is also quite rare in all autograph forms.

Catherine the Great, Czarina of Russia, is found in signed letters and signed documents, but neither is common and both are in significant demand, particularly by Russians, the newly avid collectors of their own history.  Josephine, Napoleon's Empress, can be collected in signed letters, but her autograph signatures alone are not found.  Her predecessor on the throne of France, Marie Antoinette, is rare in signed documents, and many of those that bear her name were signed by secretaries.   Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV’s mistress, who greatly influenced his policies and French history during the period, is quite rare in signed letters or any other autograph form.  A much more contemporary figure who influenced a country was Eva Perón, whose signed letters and signed documents are in much demand, particularly among South American collectors.  Florence Nightingale, who had a tremendous influence on patient care and hospital reform, was a popular figure who was happy to comply with admirers’ requests for her autograph signature.  She wrote and signed letters extensively, but these have generally been collected by institutional libraries and are not available on the market.  Helen Keller, who was blind, deaf, and mute, captured America's hearts, and her signed letters are very popular to this day.   Many form letters asking for money are not signed by her but, she was very happy to comply with autograph signature requests and signed cards, and genuinely signed letters can be found.  Two female authors seem to have particular appeal for women collectors:  Virginia Woolf is rare in any autograph form, with signed letters frequently bearing only her first name or her initials.  Ayn Rand is rarer still; she sent signed letters only in response to serious questions that really interested her.  Queen Victoria of England, with a very long reign in a position that required her to sign large numbers of official documents, is a very popular figure in the field of women's history.  She succeeded a series of kings, all of whom were incompetent to one degree or another, and she led England through the industrial revolution, very actively involving herself in all aspects of the transformation from a rural to a manufacturing economy.  The figure who has been of the greatest interest to collectors interested in women's history has been Eleanor Roosevelt.  She became the First Lady 150 years after Martha Washington, and she created a role for herself unlike any of her predecessors or successors.  She involved herself in every aspect of national concern, and established herself as an independent-minded woman who understood issues and was not afraid to discuss them.   She seemingly answered every letter sent to her with a signed letter, always typewritten.  Her autograph signature was very clear and there was no question whose it was, and these signed letters have been treasured ever since.

Please browse our selection of famous women autographs, signatures, documents and memorabilia or you may search our entire inventory alphabetically, by name or by category.

 
Historical Letters, Manuscripts and Documents - Renaissance Times to the Present

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