6270 Este Ave.
Cincinnati , OH 45232
United States
With offices in Cincinnati, Cleveland and Denver, Cowan’s holds over 40 auctions each year, with annual sales exceeding $16M. We reach buyers around the globe, and take pride in our reputation for integrity, customer service and great results. A full-service house, Cowan’s Auctions specializes in Am...Read more
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Jun 22, 2018
Printed broadside, 12 x 19.25 in., advertising the breeding availability of stud horse, Cleveland. N.d., ca 1840-45. Broadside features a large illustration of a stallion with front legs raised as a groom with a whip holds onto his bridle. Text below introduces, "Cleveland, By the late Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin's Cleveland, selected as a Brood Horse with great care from that celebrated race of Coach Horses and Roadsters in England, long known under the term Cleveland Bays, and so fully descanted upon in all the treatises on the Breeds of England." Text goes on to announce that Cleveland will stand at Bremo Plantation in Fluvanna County, available for breeding at the price of "Five Dollars, if paid within the Season, or Six Dollars afterwards; Ten Dollars insurance; and Twenty-five Cents to the Groom." Broadside undersigned in print, "William Ancel, / Agent for John H. Cocke."
John Hartwell Cocke II (1780-1866) was the son of Colonel John Hartwell Cocke, a prominent Virginia planter. The junior Cocke became a brigadier general of the Virginia militia during the War of 1812 and settled with his family along the James River in Fluvanna County. There he built the Bremo Plantation, where, like many gentlemen, he bred horses such as Utilitarian. He was also an associate of Thomas Jefferson, and helped him establish the University of Virginia along with James Madison, James Monroe, and Joseph Carrington Cabell. Recently, Cocke's diaries have become of interest due to their content about the relationship between Jefferson and his slave, Sally Hemmings.
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