Dictionary Definition
autograph
Noun
1 something written by one's own hand
2 a person's own signature [syn: John
Hancock] v : mark with one's signature; "The author autographed
his book" [syn: inscribe]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A person's own signature or handwriting.
- A manuscript in the author's handwriting.
Translations
signature
- Albanian: autograf
- Crimean Tatar: avtograf
- Finnish: nimikirjoitus
hand-written manuscript
- Finnish: käsikirjoitus
Adjective
- Written in the author's own handwriting.
hand-written manuscript
- Finnish: käsin kirjoitettu
Verb
Translations
to sign, or write one's name or signature on a
book
- Albanian: autograf
- Finnish: nimikirjoittaa, antaa nimikirjoitus
to write something in one's own handwriting
- Albanian: autograf
- Finnish: kirjoittaa käsin
Extensive Definition
An autograph is a document written entirely in
the handwriting of its author, as opposed to a typeset document or one
transcribed by an amanuensis or a copyist; the meaning overlaps
with that of the word holograph.
Autograph also refers to a person's signature. This term is used
in particular for the practice of collecting autographs of celebrities. The hobby of
collecting autographs is known as philography.
Styles
An individual's writing styles change throughout the lifespan of a person; a signature of President George Washington (c. 1795) will be different from one when he was an 18-year-old land surveyor. After British Admiral Nelson lost his right arm at the Tenerife sea-battle in 1797, he switched to using his left hand. However, the degree of change may vary greatly. The signatures of Washington and Lincoln changed only slightly during their adult lives, while John F. Kennedy's signature was different virtually every time he signed.Other factors affect an individuals signature,
including their level of education, health, and so on. Blues singer
John Lee
Hooker had a limited education, and such is reflected in his
handwriting. Composer Charles Ives
and boxer Muhammad Ali
both suffered from Parkinson's disease, and their handwriting show
the effects of that condition as well. Native American Chief
Geronimo
had no concept of an alphabet; he "drew" his signature, much like a
pictograph.
Many individuals have much more fanciful
signatures than their normal cursive writing, including elaborate
ascenders, descenders and exotic flourishes,
much as one would find in calligraphic writing. As an
example, the final "k" in John
Hancock's famous signature on the US
Declaration of Independence loops back to underline his name.
This kind of flourish is also known as a paraph. John Hancock's signature
on the Declaration of Independence is so unique and well-known that
the phrase "John Hancock" has become a synonym for "signature", and
a prominent piece of American iconography.
Categories of celebrities
Some of the most popular categories of autograph subjects are Presidents, military figures, sports, popular culture, artists, social and religious leaders, scientists, astronauts and authors.Some collectors may specialize in specific fields
(such as Nobel Prize winners) or general topics (military leaders
participating in World War I) or specific documents (i.e., signers
of the Charter of the United Nations; signers of the U.S.
Constitution; signers of the Israeli Declaration of Independence;
signers of the Charter of the European Common Union; signers of the
WWII German or Japanese Surrender documents). Sports memorabilia
signed by a whole team can often be sold for hundreds or thousands
of dollars.
Commercialization
Many celebrities still enjoy signing autographs for free for fans, keeping it an interesting hobby. Hilary Duff has publicly lashed-out at other teen idol stars who avoid autograph collectors. Art Carney also enjoyed signing autographs until his death in November of 2003.Many people are not willing to distribute their
signature—at least not for free. Sports personalities in
this category include most baseball players, including the
majority of the New York
Yankees, Joe
Dimaggio, and most notoriously, Barry Bonds.
Other sports stars who try to avoid signing whenever possible are
Bill
Russell, who does not sign at all in public and only sparingly
at private signing sessions. Michael
Jordan, would not and could not sign for most of his career
because people's safety was at risk due to frenzied attempts to get
his signature, which is worth hundreds of dollars. Jordan has
frequently signed at more peaceful events, such as golf
tournaments. It is also difficult to get Michael
Jackson's autograph. A typical scenario is hundreds of fans in
a crush waiting by Jackson's hotel, with Jackson signing five or
ten autographs as he rushes to his vehicle.
Realizing the potential profit in the sale of pop
culture autographs, many dealers also would wait for hours for a
celebrity to emerge from a location, present several photos for the
celebrity to sign and then sell most of them. Some dealers would
locate a celebrity's home address and write to them repeatedly
asking for autographs. The celebrities soon grew tired of the
practice and limited their responses. Because of the many
autographs a celebrity might sign over time, some check requests
against a record of past requests. Boxer George
Foreman, for instance, records the names and addresses of every
person requesting an autograph to limit such abuses.
Secretarial Signatures
Celebrities sometimes authorized secretaries to
sign their correspondence. In the early months of WWII, U.S. Army
Chief of Staff George C. Marshall felt obligated to sign every
condolence letter sent to the families of slain soldiers. But as
the death rate increased, he was forced to assign an assistant to
"forge" his signature to the letters. The surrogate signatures were
hard to distinguish from the originals. General Douglas MacArthur
rarely signed a WWII condolence letter personally and all of his
letters to families were signed by one of two assistants who tried
hard to duplicate his signature but the "forgeries" were
distinguished by an unusually high letter "l" and a skinny "D".
MacArthur's Korean War-period condolence letters had pre-printed
signatures.
In the 1952 Presidential Election, General
Eisenhower often had secretaries forge his name to campaign letters
and "personally inscribed" autographed photographs.
Autopen signatures
Since the early 1950s almost all American presidents have had an autopen or robot signature-signing machine sign their letters, photographs, books, and even official documents. The Signa-Signer can even write out in ink an authentically looking handwritten message that has been typed into the machine. One book detailing the use of this machine by President John F. Kennedy (1961-1963) is The Robot That Helped to Make a President.Since the 1960s, the practice of using an autopen
has spread to U.S. Cabinet members and to U.S. Senators, and many
other personalities who have a high volume of correspondence with
the public.
A photo signed by astronaut Neil
Armstrong (c.1972) is an autopen signature; Armstrong declined
to sign most of these items since 1980. He now signs personally for
he has had a decline in mail received. Astronaut Alan Shepard
acknowledged that NASA uses the autopen
machine to sign the astronauts' voluminous correspondence. Many
large corporations also use these machines for signing business
letters. One might think that autopen signatures would constantly
match one another. However, even autopen signatures will eventually
change as the signature drum becomes worn and thereby alters the
signature. Due to these professional imitations, one must be wary
of buying presidential or astronaut signatures from unknown
sellers.
In December 2004 a controversy arose when it was
revealed that the United States' Secretary
of Defense, Donald
Rumsfeld, was using an autopen to sign letters-of-condolence to
families of American military members who had died during Gulf War
II. Shortly thereafter, Rumsfeld announced that he would start
to personally sign such letters.
Forged autographs
Autograph collecting is an enthralling hobby to collectors, who enjoy assembling a series of historical documents, letters or objects that have been signed or autographed by a notable person as a way of capturing a piece of history. However, collectors must be aware that the hobby is fraught with documents, photographs and sports items that were signed by forgers seeking to profit by selling forged items to unwitting buyers. Sometimes just the signature has been forged, in other instances the entire document has been fabricated. Forged autographs of nearly all famous personalities abound. Differentiating forged from authentic autographs is almost impossible for the amateur collector and a professional should be consulted.One method commonly seen on eBay is called
"preprinting" by many sellers. The item is only a photocopy of an
actual autographed photo, usually printed on glossy home photo
paper. Since this is almost always disclosed to the buyer, some may
not consider these actual forgeries.
Forgers go to great lengths to make their
forgeries appear authentic. They use blank end papers from old
books upon which to write their fake signatures in an attempt to
match the paper of the era in which the personality lived. They
have researched ink formulations of the era that they want to
replicate. One book that explores the production of impressive fake
manuscripts pertaining to Mormons
is: A Gathering of Saints by Robert Lindsey.
One must know the era in which American
presidents signed their documents. American presidents previously
signed "land grants" until President Andrew
Jackson (c.1836) became bored with the time-consuming task.
Since then secretaries of the president have mimicked their
master's signatures on these documents (known as "proxy"
signatures). Virtually all movie stars
have their secretaries sign their letters and photographs for them.
When President Ronald
Reagan was an actor during the 1940s, he had his mother sign
his name to much of his fan mail.
During the American
Civil War (1861-1865), the president of the
Confederate States of America was Jefferson
Davis. Due to his extensive correspondence, Davis' wife
frequently signed his name to his dictated letters. As she
duplicated his signature so well, she usually placed a period after
the signature so that he could discern her signatures from his
own.
All of the Union and Confederate generals from
the American Civil War have had their signatures forged. Many were
faked during the 1880s, a period that included the fad of aging
soldiers in collecting Civil War autographs. Most deceptions were
of mere signatures on a small piece of paper, but extensively
written letters were forged as well. Autograph collectors should be
cautious of clipped signatures. The bogus autograph is glued onto
an authentic steel-engraved portrait of the subject. Some steel
engravings may have reprinted the autograph of the portrayed
subject; this is known as a facsimile autograph, and to an
uninformed buyer it may appear to be real.
Deceptive devices
Some personalities have used a rubber or steel hand-stamp to "sign" their documents. American President Andrew Johnson (c.1866) did so during his tenure as a senator prior to assuming the presidency, since his right hand was injured in a train accident. This is why his autograph as President differs from previous autographs. President Warren Harding frequently used a rubber stamp while he was a senator. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt used them, along with President Woodrow Wilson (c.1916). England's King Henry VIII and Pennsylvania colony founder William Penn used a deceiving hand stamp.Joseph Stalin had several rubber signature stamps
which were used on awards and Communist party cards. Nikita
Kruschev and Lavrenti Beria, the KGB Chief, used similar
stamps.
Quality forgeries have been made for all of
Europe's
past rulers. The French nobles had their secretaires
de main sign their documents. Many forgeries of Napoleon's
(c.1800) war orders exist; he was so busy with battle concerns that
he barely had enough time to sign promotion orders for generals, so
his scribes applied his
name to lesser documents.
Many famous scientists, astronauts, Arctic
explorers, musicians, poets, and literary authors have had
forgeries of their epistles and signatures produced . False
signatures of the aviator Charles
Lindbergh were clandestinely signed onto real 1930-era airmail
envelopes bought at stamp shops and then re-sold to unwary buyers;
the same has occurred with Amelia
Earhart and the Wright brothers. "Mickey Mouse" creator,
Walt
Disney (1955), had several of his cartoonists duplicate his
artistic signature on replies to children seeking his
autograph.
Texan paper currency was signed in ink by
Sam
Houston, though not handwritten by Houston himself.
An article in Smithsonian
Magazine explored the "melting timepieces" artwork of the
Spanish painter Salvador
Dalí. It quoted one of his secretaries as claiming that she
signed the artist's signature to postcard depictions of his
paintings.
Some deceivers cut pages from books that American
President Richard
Nixon (c.1970) signed on the blank flyleaf, typed his letter of
resignation from the presidency on that signed page, and then sold
the doctored item as if Nixon had personally signed a scarce copy
of the historical document. The miscreant has changed the value of
a lower-priced signed book quite easily to a much more lucrative
item; changing a mere signature into a signed manuscript. This
practice has expanded to include quotations from George W. Bush,
Richard Nixon, Hillary Clinton, John F.Kennedy and Franklin D.
Roosevelt. Although now marketed as "souvenir" signed copies, they
are, by definition, fraudulent creations.
World War II (1939-1945)
Many of the autographed documents allegedly signed by the German leaders of the Nazi government have been forged. Spurious documents and postcards claiming to be signed by Adolf Hitler are extant. Many were written on blank Nazi stationery that had been purloined by Allied soldiers from the desks in the Führer's bunker in Berlin. German Fieldmarshall Erwin Rommel has had many bogus signatures penned in his characteristic green pencil that he used (ink dried too quickly in the hot North African climate). Italian dictator Benito Mussolini's signature has been forged on authentic documents actually signed by King Emanuel—this helps to make the phony Mussolini signature appear real, since it is on an otherwise genuine document.Any serious autograph collector must be alert for
the WWII blitzkrieging General Guderian autographed document: it
may be signed by his son who became a German general after the war.
The same confusion can exist in trying to differentiate between the
signatures of the sons of Rommel and the American Admiral
Nimitz (1945).
Forgers buy real Revolutionary
War-era documents and surreptitiously pen a famous patriot's
name between other real signatures in a manuscript in hope of
deceiving an unsuspecting buyer. Others will use tea or tobacco
stains to brown or age their modern missives.
It has been estimated that over 80 percent of the
autographed items of famous American sports players being sold over
the Internet are
fakes. Baseball legend Babe Ruth, for
instance, has had his signature forged on old baseballs, then
rubbed in dirt to make them appear to be from the 1930s.
Only long-established autograph dealers,
auctioneers and authenticators whose practice is limited to
autographs have the many years of research experience to determine
the authenticity of autographs being sold in secondhand
markets.
Copyright
Under United States Copyright Law, autographs are not eligible for copyright, as they are "titles, names...mere variations of typographic ornamentation, lettering, or coloring".Glossary
In autograph-auction catalogues the following abbreviations are used to help describe the type of letter or document that is being offered for sale.- AD: Autograph Document (hand-written by the person to be collected, but not signed)
- ADS: Autograph Document Signed (written and signed by same individual)
- AL: Autograph Letter (hand-written by the person to be collected, but not signed)
- ALS: Autograph Letter Signed (hand-written and signed by same individual)
- AMs: Autograph Manuscript (hand-written; such as the draft of a play, research paper or music sheet)
- AMsS: Autograph Manuscript Signed (hand-written and signed by same individual)
- AMusQs: Autograph Musical Quotation Signed (hand-written and signed by same individual)
- AN: Autograph Note (much shorter than a letter)
- ANS: Autograph Note Signed (hand-written and signed by same individual)
- AQS: Autograph Quote Signed (hand-written and signed by same individual; poem verse, sentence, or bar-of-music)
- DS: Document signed (printed, or while hand-written by another, is signed by individual sought to be collected)
- LS: Letter Signed (hand-written by someone else, but signed by the individual sought to be collected)
- PS: Photograph Signed or Postcard Signed
- SP: Signed Photograph
- TLS: Typed Letter Signed
- TNS: Typed Note Signed
- folio: A printer's sheet of paper folded once to make two leaves, double quarto size or larger.
- octavo(8vo): A manuscript page about six-by-nine inches. (Originally determined by folding a printer's sheet of paper to form eight leaves.)
- quarto(4to): A manuscript page of about nine and one-half by twelve inches. (Originally determined by folding a printer's sheet of paper twice to form four leaves.)
References
- Forging History: The Detection of Fake Letters and Documents by Kenneth Rendell, Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1994, 173 pages. This book was written by one of America's most-respected autograph dealers. It discusses the materials (paper and ink) used by forgers; shows comparisons between fake and real signatures; discusses famous forgers; provides an analysis of major forgeries; details the equipment used in examining questionable documents; and provides a bibliography of almost 100 books written on the subject of either autograph collecting or documenting forgeries.
- Great Forgers and Famous Fakes by Charles Hamilton, Crown Publishers, 1980, 278 pages. A legendary autograph expert provides hundreds of illustrations of fake versus real signatures. He discusses the manuscript forgers and how they duped the experts.
- Making Money in Autographs by George Sullivan, 1977, 223 pages. As the title suggests, this book presents strategies as to how one can maximize the value of one's collection by investing in prime autograph documents in various collectible fields. A wonderful analysis of the scarcity and resale appeal ability of the holographic material of all U.S. presidents and many other prominent personalities. Shows presidential proxy and autopen samples. He confirms that most astronaut materials have passed through the autopen. Nice lists and dates of: U.S. presidents, wives of the presidents, vice presidents, signers of the Declaration of Independence, and early manned space flights.
- Collecting Autographs and Manuscripts by Charles Hamilton, Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1961, 269 pages. It is illustrated with more than 800 facsimiles and other reproductions of historical documents signed by nobility, political leaders, American Wild West sheriffs and badmen, military, and worldwide literature fields.
- Autographs and Manuscripts: A Collector's Manual edited by Ed Berkeley, Charles Scribner's Sons Pub., 1978, 565 pages. Contains some 40 articles by famous autograph dealers and collectors who discuss how to detect fake autographs; how to care for your collection; and details different ways of how to collect autographs by different topics: science, religion, literature, politics, etc.
- Scribblers & Scoundrels by Charles Hamilton, Eriksson Pub., 1968, 282 pages. A lively and entertaining book discussing the forgers and their techniques that the author encountered when they attempted to sell their forgeries to him at his manuscript shop.
- Manuscripts: The First Twenty Years edited by Priscilla Taylor, Greenwood Press, 1984, 429 pages. A compilation of over 50 articles reprinted from publications of The Manuscript Society. It primarily details how to assemble autograph collections by different topics: medical notables, literary authors, scientists, etc. It slightly discusses the art of detecting forgeries.
- Autographs: A Key to Collecting by Mary Benjamin, 1963, 345 pages. Written by the great female autograph dealer. Provides a historical summary of: collecting, terminology, evaluation in pricing a document, famous forgers, how to detect forgeries, confused identities, care and preservation, and two nice tables detailing the names of Napoleon's marshals and family members.
- Big Name Hunting: A Beginners Guide to Autograph Collecting by Charles Hamilton, Simon & Schuster Pub., 1973, 95 pages. A short, enjoyable book advising teenagers how to start their collections. But with some helpful knowledge about identifying autopen signatures and other tidbits about collecting that are useful even to the professional collector. Good revelations about the copycat signatures by presidential secretaries. How to identify lithographs and steel-stamp signatures. Concise, but still choice!
- The Signature of America by Charles Hamilton, Harper & Row, 1979, 279 pages. A book for those who specialize in American autographs: the Old West, authors, presidents, women, artists, criminals, musicians, entertainers, and many others.
- Word Shadows of the Great: The Lure of Autograph Collecting by Thomas Madigan, Frederick Stokes Co., 1930, 300 pages. One of the early books discussing the excitement of autograph collecting, and presents nice facsimiles of old European autographs.
- Collecting Autographs For Fun and Profit by Robert Pelton, Betterway Pub., 1987, 160 pages. A fun, breezy book about autograph collecting. Many facsimiles of sports autographs, but also shows 12 different variations as to how Napoleon signed his name. Explains what factors influence the price of an autograph.
- From the White House Inkwell by John Taylor, Tuttle Co., 1968, 147 pages. Presents many facsimile letters from U.S. presidents and discusses rubber-stamp and proxy signatures used by presidential secretaries.
- Autograph Collector's Checklist edited by John Taylor, The Manuscript Society, 1990, 172 pages. While unfairly low on this book list, it is THE reference book of seldom-seen lists of those in the collectible fields of: the Stamp Act Congress, Justices of the Supreme Court, the War of 1812, Unionists & Confederates, First Ladies, financiers, cabinet members, composers, scientists, unsuccessful presidential candidates, military participants, and a few other fields. Many nuggets of tidbit factoids about most of these people, and dates of their service or work.
- The Autograph Collector by Robert Notlep, Crown Pub., 1968, 240 pages. For its time, a nice display of autograph facsimiles, with interest to youngsters in starting an autograph collection. Interesting name lists of : attendees at the U.S. Constitutional Convention, Revolutionary War generals, signers of the United Nations Charter, Napoleon's marshalls, and Napoleon's immediate family and relatives by marriage. A nice book of autograph trivia.
- The Complete Book of Autograph Collecting by George Sullivan, 1971, 154 pages. This is another book for collectors. It discusses the spry efforts of autograph hounds in stalking sports and movie autographs, but also reviews the standard political and historical items that teenagers really can't afford.
- A Gathering of Saints by Robert Lindsey, Simon & Schuster, 1988, 397 pages. It reveals the criminal forging techniques of one of the greatest forgers of historical holograms, and why he killed two people to hide his fakes.
- Dönitz at Nuremberg: A Re-Appraisal by H.K. Thompson, Amber Pub., 1976, 198 pages. Contains the facsimile signatures and biographies of some 350 worldwide military personalities of World War II. The author wrote to each of these notables and asked each to give their thoughts about the convening of war-criminal trials for military personnel, specifically for the German GrossAdmiral Dönitz; many very illuminate opinions.
- Leaders and Personalities of the Third Reich by Charles Hamilton, 2 vols., Bender Pub., 1984 (Vol. 1) and 1996 (Vol. 2). Two volumes of almost 1,000 glossy pages providing biographies and the reproduction of hundreds of facsimile letters and autographs of Germans (military, political, religious, spies, etc.) involved with the short-lived Thousand Year Reich.
- The Guinness Book of World Autographs by Ray Rawlins, 1997, 244 pages. The title pretty much says it all: hundreds of worldwide facsimile autographs and identifications.
- The Robot that Helped to Make a President by Charles Hamilton, 1965. Reveals the different proxy signatures produced by the autopen machines used by Pres. John Kennedy.
- War Between the States: Autographs and Biographical Sketches by Jim Hayes, Palmetto Pub., 1989, 464 pages. Your guide to the hundreds of autographs of both Union and Confederate personalities from the U.S. Civil War (1861-1865).
- American Autographs by Charles Hamilton, 2 vols., Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 1983, 634 pages. For the specialist who needs almost 2,000 facsimile documents of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence and Revolutionary War Leaders (including British and French) and other patriots. The second volume: contains copious samples of all presidents; reveals Pres. Eisenhower use of the autopen even before his presidency; presents dozens of secretarial proxy signatures for the modern presidents; lists Watergate participants; displays First Lady items; and shows facsimiles of assassins or would-be assassins from John Booth to John Hinckley. Perhaps this should really be the second book listed, but listed low here only because of its cost. It is simply superlative with its autopen minutiae and facsimiles. You shouldn't be a buyer of modern presidents without having these tomes at hand for reference.
- Autographs of Indian Personalities by S.S. Hitkari, Phulkari Pub., 1999, 112 pages. Provides wonderful autograph facsimiles and biographies for some 250 literary, medical, political and music notables from the land of the Taj Mahal: India.
- Ieri Ho Visto Il Duce: Trilogia dell'iconografic mussonliniana ed. Ermanno Alberti. High glossy photo book of many items relating to Italian dictator Benito Mussolini; including 24-page analysis of his autographs. Italian language.
- Who's Who series; Who's Who in America, etc. Provides mailing addresses for thousands of individuals involved in: science, music, space, sports, military, politics, world leaders, etc.
- Appletons' Cyclopaedia of American Biography ed. By James Wilson, 6 vols., 1888. Provides the biographies of thousands of American notables, and dozens of steel engravings with facsimile autographs.
See also
autograph in German: Autograph
autograph in Spanish: Autógrafo
autograph in Dutch: Autograaf
autograph in Russian: Автограф
(рукопись)
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
John Hancock, X, article, brainchild, christcross, cipher, composition, computer
printout, copy, countermark, countersign, countersignature,
counterstamp,
cross, device, document, draft, edited version, endorsement, engrossment, essay, fair copy, fiction, final draft, finished
version, first draft, first edition, flimsy, hand, holograph, initials, ink, letter, literae scriptae,
literary artefact, literary production, literature, lucubration, manuscript, mark, mark of signature, matter, monogram, nonfiction, opus, original, paper, parchment, penscript, piece, piece of writing, play, poem, printed matter, printout, production, reading matter,
recension, screed, scrip, script, scrive, scroll, seal, second draft, sigil, sign manual, signature, signet, subscribe, subscription, the written
word, transcript,
transcription,
typescript, version, visa, vise, work, writing