Published by Washington, DC, 1890
Seller: Charles Agvent, est. 1987, ABAA, ILAB, Fleetwood, PA, U.S.A.
Signed
Document. A deed SIGNED by Bruce as Recorder of Deeds, a position appointed to him by President Benjamin Harrison replacing Frederick Douglass. Bruce is best known as the first African-American to serve a full term in the United States Senate. Crease marks from folding. Very Good.
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Signed
Unbound. Condition: Near Fine. Partially printed document Signed ("B.K. Bruce") as Recorder of Public Deeds for the District of Columbia. 2pp. Folio. Bruce was the second African-American to serve in the United States Senate (after Hiram T. Revels) and was the first formerly enslaved person, and the first African-American to serve a full term in the Senate (as well as the last for 85 years until the election of Edward Brooke of Massachusetts in 1966). After his release from slavery, he attended Oberlin College and then became a planter in Mississippi. After working his way up through a number of local offices he was elected to the Senate representing Mississippi in 1875 where he was a staunch defender of minorities, including the Chinese and Native Americans. After completing his term in the Senate, he served as Register of the U.S. Treasury until 1885. In 1889 he was appointed by President Benjamin Harrison as Recorder of Deeds for the District, succeeding Frederick Douglass, who left to become Minister to Haiti. Bruce served in that office until 1895 and then returned to his previous position in the Treasury Department.
Publication Date: 1890
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
[African American] Bruce, Blanche Kelso. Manuscript legal document, dated 1890, signed by prominent African American senator and former slave Blanche Bruce. The document is signed by Bruce in his role as Recorder of Deeds office in Washington, D.C. Bruce, born enslaved in Virginia and later elected U.S. Senator from Mississippi, held this federal post during a period of narrowing Black political power, making documents signed in this capacity direct evidence of African American authority within the administrative state. Bruce, Blanche Kelso, as Recorder of Deeds. Deed of Trust. Washington, D.C.: October 6, 1890. Two pages, one sheet accordion folded printed and manuscript legal document, signed in ink, recording a trust agreement between John M. Henderson and Waggaman & Pelling. The document sets forth terms of indebtedness secured by real property, including promissory notes, repayment schedule, interest obligations, provisions governing insurance and taxes, and conditions of default empowering trustees to act. The instrument includes notarization by Robert T. Morris and formal recording references, indicating entry into the District of Columbia land records. Bruce's signature appears in his official capacity certifying the recording, with printed legal text supplemented by extensive manuscript entries in a consistent clerical hand. Bruce's tenure as Recorder of Deeds followed his national political career and made him one of the few Reconstruction-era Black federal appointees in Washington. The office itself held symbolic and practical importance, overseeing property documentation and legal instruments central to urban development and capital exchange. Documents such as this demonstrate a legacy of African American political leadership at a time when Black involvement in politics in the American South had been largely dismantled. Folded as issued with pronounced horizontal and vertical creases; moderate toning; scattered staining; small edge wear and minor fold separations with reinforcement; signatures strong and legible; overall good condition. A scarce document signed by a prominent Black Reconstruction-era politician. Signed.