Swann Galleries
  • BUYING
  • SELLING
Login
Buy
  • BUYING
  • SELLING
  • Auction Schedule
  • Past Auctions
  • Departments
  • News
  • Artist Index
  • Login Login
Departments
  • Books & Manuscripts
  • Americana
  • Autographs
  • Fine Books
  • Maps & Atlases
  • Fine Art
  • 19th Century Art
  • Modern Art
  • Post-War Art
  • Contemporary Art
  • African American Art
  • Fine Art Prints
  • Illustration Art
  • Photographs & Photobooks
  • Vintage Posters
  • LGBTQ+ Art, Material Culture & History
My Account
  • My Auctions
  • My Bids
  • My Saved Lots
  • My Purchases
  • My Messages
  • Edit Profile
  • Edit Billing Info
Skip Repeated Main Site Banner
Swann Galleries
  • BUYING
  • SELLING
Login

Thomas Paine’s American Crisis Makes the Albany News

“These are the times which try men’s souls…” so begins Thomas Paine’s The American Crisis, arguably his second most famous work. Our 2014 annual fall Americana auction, Swann will offer a first edition of the extremely rare collection of essays that helped turn the tide of the Revolution in 1776. And, the eloquence of those opening lines continues to resonate.

Paine wrote the first American Crisis in spare moments while serving in the Continental Army as aide-de-camp to General Nathanael Greene. He later recalled, “I began the first number of the Crisis … at Newark upon the retreat from Fort Lee, and continued writing it at every place we stopt at.” It was published in the Philadelphia Journal on 19 December 1776, and then in pamphlet form four days later. 

Its bracing rhetoric was a much-needed jolt to the demoralized American army. As his contemporary James Cheetham wrote, “The number was read in camp, to every corporal’s guard, and in the army and out of it had more than the intended effect. . . . Militia-men who, already tired of the war, were straggling from the army, returned. Hope succeeded to despair, cheerfulness to gloom, and firmness to irresolution” (Life of Thomas Paine). Within a week of the pamphlet’s publication, Washington’s night crossing of the Delaware turned the fortunes of the American army. 

Paine issued several later numbers of the American Crisis, but some of them appeared only in newspapers. These first three are generally found together, when they are found at all. This copy narrowly escaped destruction earlier this year. It had belonged to a collector from upstate New York. During the sorting of his estate, the American Crisis was placed in a box intended for the dumpster, but one of the heirs spotted it at the last moment. 


A local news program—News 10 in Albany, New York–covered the story, the last chapter of which will be told in tomorrow’s auction.

UPDATE: The Tomas Paine first edition brought $125,000 in the 2014 auction, and the Albany news covered its sale and what it meant to the consigners.

Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
November 24, 2014
Author: Swann Communications
Category: Printed & Manuscript Americana
Tags:
  • Albany
  • American Revolution
  • Americana
  • New York
  • Rick Stattler
  • The American Crisis
  • Thomas Paine
  • top lots
Previous
The 14th State: Thomas Jefferson Signs Vermont Statehood Act
Next
Swann FAQ: What Is an Edition?
  • About Swann Galleries
  • Contact
  • How to Bid
  • Consigning at Swann
  • Terms & Conditions of Sale
  • Privacy Policy
  • Auctions & Catalogues
  • Upcoming Auctions
  • Results
  • Our Specialists
  • Books & Manuscripts
  • Fine Art
  • Photographs
  • Vintage Posters
  • LGBTQ+ Art, Material Culture & History
  • Contact Us

104 East 25th Street

New York, NY 10010

(212) 254-4710

swann@swanngalleries.com

  • Newsletter Signup
  • New App Coming Soon!
  • iOS
  • Android
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • BlueSky

© 2025 Swann Galleries. All Rights Reserved.

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy