RR Auction: Fine Autographs and Artifacts featuring John F. Kennedy

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Fine Autographs and Artifacts www.RRAuction.com May 8, 2019

Featuring John F. Kennedy


Bob Eaton CEO, Acquisitions (800) 937-3880 ext. 102

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UPCOMING

Fine Autographs & Artifacts Now accepting consignments The John Brennan Collection May 16, 2019 Hollywood May 23, 2019 Space Featuring Apoll 11 June 20, 2019

APRIL 19 - MAY 8

Bidding begins as soon as the catalog is posted online (Friday, April 19). At 6 p.m. on Wed. May 8 the one-hour extended bidding period begins followed immediately by the 30 Minute Rule. All times in RR Auction guidelines and instructions are stated according to the Eastern (U.S.) time zone.

Sports Now accepting consignments Presidents Now accepting consignments

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AUTHENTICATORS AND CONSULTANTS JOHN REZNIKOFF, UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES

John is the founder of University Archives, a leading firm specializing in the appraisal and authentication of documents and manuscripts. He is affiliated with multiple professional organizations dedicated to the autograph industry, was a contributing editor for Autograph Collector magazine, and is a PSA/DNA authenticator. Letters of Authenticity are available on certain lots. Priced upon request*

PSA/DNA

PSA/DNA is the world’s leading third party autograph authentication company. Using state of the art technology, PSA/DNA created a security system to prevent counterfeiting, forgery and piracy. As the most respected service in the industry, PSA/DNA’s years of expertise and knowledge have established an impeccable reputation for providing professional, unbiased, expert opinions. STEVE ZARELLI

Letters of Authenticity are availableon certain lots. Priced from $25 to $200*

STEVE ZARELLI AUTHENTICATION

Steve Zarelli is a recognized authority in the field of astronaut autographs. His findings have been published in the definitive space collecting reference Relics of the Space Race, and he has contributed articles to the UACC’s Pen & Quill magazine, Autograph Times magazine, and the UACC signature study Neil Armstrong: The Quest for His Autograph. Zarelli Space Authentication also provides authentication consulting services to James Spence Authentication (JSA), Sportscard Guaranty Authentic (SGC), and PSA/DNA Authentication. Letters of Authenticity are available on certain lots. Priced from $30 to $150*

ROGER EPPERSON SIGNED, SEALED, AND DELIVERED/REAL

Roger has an extensive background as a full-time dealer in autographs and collectibles, and is a trusted authenticator in all areas of contemporary music. When supported by the REAL logo and Roger’s name, music-related autographs assume an added value. Letters of Authenticity are available on certain lots. Priced from $30 to $150*

PHIL SEARS COLLECTIBLES

For over 20 years Phil Sears has been the recognized world authority on Walt Disney’s autograph habits. Included among Phil-sears.com customers are the Walt Disney Company and the Walt Disney Family Museum. Sears’s items have been featured in Autograph Collector magazine, E Ticket magazine, Collect! magazine, and the biography Walt Disney’s Missouri. Letters of Authenticity are available on certain lots. Priced upon request*

FRANK CAIAZZO, BEATLES AUTOGRAPHS beatles autographs

Frank is the world’s leading authority on Beatles signed and handwritten material. Since he began his study in 1986, he has amassed the largest file of signed examples on the planet. Through decades of focused and diligent research, he has acquired great skill in identifying authentic Beatles autographs, and also has gained the insight necessary to accurately approximate the era in which they were signed.

RENATO SAGGIORI

With more than 50 years in the European autograph market, Renato is considered an expert on the manuscripts of European royalty, scientists, painters, and writers. He is also considered the leading authority on papal autographs and manuscripts. His 2006 book, The Popes - Five Centuries of Signatures, is an indispensible reference tool.

BRIAN GREEN AND MARIA GREEN, BRIAN AND MARIA GREEN CIVIL WAR SIGNATURES

With more than 45 years combined experience in the field, Brian and Maria are two of the nation’s leading experts in Civil War autographs and manuscripts.

JAMES CAMNER

James is a leading classical music autograph dealer. With more than 35 years experience, he is a founding member of PADA, an authenticator for PSA/DNA, a member of the ABAA, and an author of over ten published books on related subjects.

RICH CONSOLA

Rich has studied Elvis Presley’s handwriting and signature for nearly 20 years, which has placed him in the forefront of Presley authenticators worldwide.

BECKETT AUTHENTICATION SERVICES

Beckett Authentication Services provides expert third party opinions on autographs from all genres and eras. Led by authentication experts Steve Grad and Brian Sobrero, the BAS experts have unmatched years of experience authenticating autographs, and are responsible for authenticating some of the rarest and most valuable items in the industry. With the most trusted and knowledgeable experts in the autograph authentication field, BAS authentication is a must for any autograph collector or dealer. * For more information on Letters of Authenticity call (800) 937-3880


CONTENTS

John F. Kennedy ............................................................................................................ 4 Presidents and First Ladies.......................................................................................... 30

Notables....................................................................................................................... 44 Military.......................................................................................................................... 74 Aviation......................................................................................................................... 81 Space........................................................................................................................... 82 Art, Architecture, and Design........................................................................................ 87 Comic Art and Animation.............................................................................................. 94 Literature...................................................................................................................... 97 Music......................................................................................................................... 106 Classic Entertainment................................................................................................ 128

Sports........................................................................................................................ 135 Conditions of Sale..................................................................................................... 142

Bob Eaton CEO, Acquisitions bob.eaton@rrauction.com

Louis Bollman Director of Sports Auctions louis.bollman@RRAuction.com

Evan Mugford Writer evan.mugford@rrauction.com

Carla Eaton Owner, Auctioneer carla.eaton@rrauction.com

Joseph DelGrippo Director of Sports Auctions joseph.delgrippo@RRAauction.com

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Robert S. Eaton Sr. 1940–2001

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John F. Kennedy Outstanding original study for JFK’s official White House portrait by Aaron Shikler 1. John F. Kennedy Original Artwork by Aaron Shikler.

Original study for the official White House portrait of John F. Kennedy by Aaron A. Shikler, accomplished in white chalk and charcoal on gray-green 23.25 x 32 artist’s paper, signed and dated in the lower right by the artist, “AAS 70.” This exquisite study portrays President Kennedy in a contemplative profile pose, hand on hip and head tipped downward. It was one of five studies done by Shikler after receiving the commission to create the official portrait of JFK in 1970: this is one of two larger examples which he considered likely candidates for the final portrait, and he also drew three smaller in size. The other larger study—one showing Kennedy facing forward, arms crossed and head down—was ultimately chosen as the image to hang in the White House in perpetuity. Handsomely mounted, matted, and framed to an impressive overall size of 31 x 40. In fine condition. Provenance: Lot #152, Documents and Artifacts Relating to the Life and Career of John F. Kennedy, Guernsey’s, March 18–19, 1998; this artwork served as the cover image for the catalog of this important sale. Jacqueline Kennedy had become an admirer of Aaron Shikler’s work after seeing paintings he had done of her nieces and nephews in the Lawford branch of the Kennedy family. She commissioned him to paint portraits of her own children, Caroline and John, Jr., in 1967, and she served as part of the 1970 selection committee that chose Shikler to create JFK’s posthumous official White House portrait. According to Shikler, Mrs. Kennedy had one stipulation: ‘I don’t want him to look the way everybody else makes him look, with the bags under his eyes and that penetrating gaze. I’m tired of that image.’ In crafting the image by which JFK would be remembered, Shikler told the Washington Post in 1971: ‘I painted him with his head bowed, not because I think of him as a martyr, but because I wanted to show him as a president who was a thinker. A thinking president is a rare thing.’ A somber and reflective portrait of the president, accomplished by one of the premier American portraitists of the 20th century. Starting Bid $5000 4 |

May 8, 2019 | JOHN F. KENNEDY


2. John F. Kennedy Signed First Day Cover. Very desirable FDC with a cachet honoring the 75th anniversary of the American Bar Association, postmarked in Boston on August 24, 1953, signed in black ink, “John F. Kennedy, U.S. Senator Mass.” The cover is also signed by former Massachusetts Governors Christian Herter and Leverett Saltonstall. In fine to very fine condition. Saltonstall served as a Bay State senator alongside Kennedy between 1953 and 1960, when the latter resigned to become president. Herter was later appointed by President Kennedy as the first United States Trade Representative. Starting Bid $200

The brass of the Democratic Party of 1959— JFK, Truman, and Roosevelt 3. John F. Kennedy, Harry S. Truman, and Eleanor Roosevelt Signed Seating List. Seating list from the

Advisory Council of the Democratic National Committee Diamond Jubilee Dinner honoring Eleanor Roosevelt at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City on December 7, 1959, eight pages 8.5 x 14, signed on the cover sheet in blue ballpoint by John F. Kennedy, Harry S. Truman, and Eleanor Roosevelt. The cover is also signed by 10 other Democratic leaders in ink and ballpoint, including: Adlai Stevenson, Hubert H. Humphrey, Pat Brown, Paul M. Butler, Mike Monroney, Mike Mansfield, Carl Albert, John McCormack, Stuart Symington, and Robert Meyner. In very good to fine condition, with staple holes and a paperclip impression to the upper left corner, light toning, and two horizontal folds. Technically an evening feting the former first lady, an Associated Press news story instead dubbed the evening a ‘beauty contest’ of 1960 presidential hopefuls from the Democratic Party. Led by Truman, the night’s ‘honorary chairman,’ the article cited Stevenson, the event’s official chairman, as the leading candidate and the Democrats’ best chance to secure the White House. Fascinating in historical context, the eventual winner of the 1960 election—Bay State Senator John F. Kennedy—was mentioned last after New Jersey Governor Robert Meyner. Three weeks after this event, on January 2, 1960, Kennedy announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. A unique and marvelous ensemble of presidential possibilities. Starting Bid $500

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Elegant wool maternity dress worn by Jackie in a 1960 LIFE magazine photo shoot 4. Jacqueline Kennedy’s Personally-Owned and -Worn Maternity Dress. Jacqueline Ken-

nedy’s personally-owned and -worn gray maternity dress, as seen in photographs taken by LIFE magazine photographer Edward Clark. The stylish lightweight wool dress features three-quarter-length sleeves, two pocket flaps, eight double-breasted buttons, and “Lord & Taylor, Fifth Avenue” and “Ma Mere” tags sewn into the cowl neck collar. Included with the dress are two vintage glossy black-and-white photographs, 8.75 x 13.25 and 13 x 10.25, both showing Kennedy wearing the dress and working with her personal secretary, Mary Barelli Gallagher, in a second floor study of the Kennedy’s Georgetown estate. The photos were taken by Edward Clark and used for an article in Life Magazine during John F. Kennedy’s historic presidential campaign. Reverse of each photo bears LIFE magazine photography stamps, with one dated “9/21/60.” In fine condition, with two small holes below top buttons of dress. Accompanied by two letters of provenance from Gallagher for the dress and the photos, in part: “[The dress was acquired] from Jacqueline B. Kennedy during one of her regular, periodic, closet-cleaning sessions at her Georgetown/White House/ Georgetown residences…This is to serve as proof of authenticity regarding the above item. Since receiving this, it has remained in my possession at my home in Alexandria, Virginia. I was formerly secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy…and Personal Secretary to Mrs. John F. Kennedy…In 1969, ‘My Life With Jacqueline Kennedy’ was published by David McKay, New York, relating my twelve years with The Kennedys.” Given the timeframe of these photographs, Kennedy was well into her pregnancy and only two months removed from delivering her second child, John F. Kennedy, Jr., on November 25, 1960, just three weeks after her husband won the 1960 presidential election. For a brief period, Jackie wore this svelte and subtle dress with the unique understanding that she would soon be named First Lady of the United States. An incredible rarity dating to a truly significant time in the lives of both John and Jackie Kennedy. Starting Bid $1000

5. John F. Kennedy 1957 Speech Draft. Typed draft for a speech by Senator John F. Kennedy, two pages, 8.5 x 11, titled and dated, “New York Herald Tribune Excerpt—Oct. 29, 1957 on Communist Situation in Kerala.” A small number of notes and corrections have been made in an unknown hand. Drafted during Kennedy’s tenure as a Democratic Senator, the speech focuses on the impoverished Communist situation in Kerala, in part: “It has a higher rate of literacy (around 40 per cent) than any state in India. Yet more than 1,250,000 of Kerala’s people are chronically unemployed. Unemployment and food are the state’s gravest problems, and any government that can solve them is assured of a long term of office. No solution is in sight. Wages are miserable. An unskilled laborer, for instance, receives the equivalent of thirty-two cents daily, a primary schoolteacher from twelve to twenty-four dollars monthly. The Communists won their election success here against a Congress party machine that had been discredited by corruption, nepotism and inefficiency. The Communists have made mistakes since taking office, but it must be said that they have given the state a more honest and hardworking administration than their predecessors.” In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

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Scapular of the Immaculate Heart of Mary “presented to me personally by John F. Kennedy” 6. John F. Kennedy Personally-Gifted Scapular. Catholic devo-

tional scapular of the Immaculate Heart of Mary given by John F. Kennedy to the son of a Navy friend in the late 1950s or early 1960s. The scapular measures 1.25 x 1.75 and has a white body with green felt serrated borders, depicting the Virgin Mary on one side and religious imagery on the other, surrounded by text reading, “Now and at the hour of our death, Immaculate heart of Mary pray for us.” Encapsulated in a plastic sleeve and attached to a thin green cord. In fine condition, with trivial soiling. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the original recipient, Jonathan E. Mahanna, in part: “This item was presented to me personally by John F. Kennedy. I received it as an adolescent sometime when Kennedy was either Senator, President Elect, or President but not after 1961. My father, John G. W. Mahanna was a dear friend of Kennedy who’s relationship began during World War II…The two stayed in touch…During John F. Kennedy’s run for both Congress and the State Senate in Massachusetts, my father helped stage appearances for Kennedy all through Western Massachusetts and Berkshire County. My mother…would organize social teas for Kennedy’s campaigns. My parents attended Kennedy’s wedding to Jacqueline Bouvier, and whenever Kennedy was passing through the area he would stay at our home.” A wonderful religious piece from the first Catholic president with superb first-person provenance. Starting Bid $200

7. John F. Kennedy, Jr. Baby Book. Adorable satin-padded “A Keepsake for Baby” booklet gifted to President-elect John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy upon the birth of their son John F. Kennedy, Jr., on November 25, 1960. Created by Paramount, the booklet measures 3.5 x 6.5, and is inscribed in blue ballpoint on the front pastedown: “[From] Mrs. Raymond McNeil, 70 Portland St. Rochester, N. H.” The last page of the booklet, reserved as “Baby’s Last Picture,” features a small affixed image of the “John Jr. Christening.” In fine condition. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from Mary Barelli Gallagher, the secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy and then later to First Lady Jackie Kennedy, in part: “This baby gift is one of the many gifts that had arrived daily to the home of President–Elect and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, 3307 N St. N. W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. on the occasion of John Jr.’s Birth…Mrs. Kennedy would ask that I prepare a letter of thanks to the sender for her to sign, and this is one of the gifts that she offered me to take home. I donated the vast majority of these gifts to various charities, others I gave away to friends, relatives, etc., keeping the more interesting ones, such as this, for myself.” Starting Bid $200

8. John F. Kennedy, Jr. French Cruciform Medal. Beautiful gold-finished French Scapular

cruciform religious medal gifted to John and Jacqueline Kennedy upon the birth of their son John F. Kennedy, Jr. The small cross, .75 x 1, features raised four-way images to both sides, with designs relating to Sacred Heart medal, the St. Joseph medal, the St. Christopher medal, and the Miraculous medal. In fine condition. Accompanied by a signed letter of provenance from Mary Barelli Gallagher, originally written for a set of 10 religious medals, in part: “This baby gift is one of the many gifts that had arrived daily to the home of President-Elect and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, 3307 N St., N.W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. on the occasion of John Jr.’s birth, November 25, 1960. Mrs. Kennedy would ask that I prepare a letter of thanks to the sender for her to sign, and this is one of the gifts that she offered me to take home. I donated the vast majority of these gifts to various charities, others I gave away to friends, relatives, etc., keeping the more interesting ones, such as this, for myself.” Provenance: Collection of Mary Barelli Gallagher, Bonhams, 2017. Barelli was secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy from 1953–1956, and personal secretary to Jackie Kennedy from 1956–1964. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 7


Irish horn rosary gifted upon the birth of JFK Jr. 9. John F. Kennedy, Jr. Irish Horn Rosary. Beautiful Irish horn rosary

bead necklace gifted to John and Jacqueline Kennedy upon the birth of their son John F. Kennedy, Jr., strung with polished yellow horn and carneliancolored beads. An amber-colored three-leaf clover pendant inscribed “Knock” (referring to the sacred site at Knock, County Mayo, Ireland) has replaced the traditional miraculous medallion, and a horn crucifix with a white metal Christ figure is suspended at the bottom. The original bilingual English–Irish retail tag remains attached. The rosary is housed in a pop-up hinged box marked “My Rosary,” with a polychromatic print of Jesus of the Sacred Heart inside the lid. In fine condition. Accompanied by a signed letter of provenance from Mary Barelli Gallagher, originally written for a pair of rosaries, in part: “This baby gift is one of the many gifts that had arrived daily to the home of President-Elect and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, 3307 N St., N.W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. on the occasion of John Jr.’s birth, November 25, 1960. Mrs. Kennedy would ask that I prepare a letter of thanks to the sender for her to sign, and this is one of the gifts that she offered me to take home. I donated the vast majority of these gifts to various charities, others I gave away to friends, relatives, etc., keeping the more interesting ones, such as this, for myself.” Provenance: Collection of Mary Barelli Gallagher, Bonhams, 2017. Barelli was secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy from 1953–1956, and personal secretary to Jackie Kennedy from 1956–1964. Starting Bid $200

10. John F. Kennedy, Jr. Misericordia Medal. Lovely blue enameled Virgin Misericordia (Virgin of Mercy) religious medal gifted to John and Jacqueline Kennedy upon the birth of their son John F. Kennedy, Jr., secured with a baby blue ribbon and original oak tag. The pendant, .25 x .5, bears a divine image of the Virgin Mary, with reverse featuring a raised symbol of the Marian cross. In fine condition. Accompanied by a signed letter of provenance from Mary Barelli Gallagher, originally written for a set of 10 religious medals, in part: “This baby gift is one of the many gifts that had arrived daily to the home of President-Elect and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, 3307 N St., N.W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. on the occasion of John Jr.’s birth, November 25, 1960. Mrs. Kennedy would ask that I prepare a letter of thanks to the sender for her to sign, and this is one of the gifts that she offered me to take home. I donated the vast majority of these gifts to various charities, others I gave away to friends, relatives, etc., keeping the more interesting ones, such as this, for myself.” Provenance: Collection of Mary Barelli Gallagher, Bonhams, 2017. Barelli was secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy from 1953–1956, and personal secretary to Jackie Kennedy from 1956–1964. Starting Bid $200

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11. John F. Kennedy, Jr. Virgin Misericordia Medal. Silver-finish Mi-

raculous Medal (Medal of Our Lady of Graces) gifted to President-elect John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy upon the birth of their son John F. Kennedy, Jr., on November 25, 1960. Measuring .5 x .75, the front of the oval medallion depicts the Virgin Mary with outspread cloak encircled with Italian text: “Mary conceived without sin, Pray for us who have recourse to thee”; and the reverse features the Marian cross and marked “Italy” below. In fine condition. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from Mary Barelli Gallagher, the secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy and then later to First Lady Jackie Kennedy, in part: “This baby gift is one of the many gifts that had arrived daily to the home of President–Elect and Mrs. John F. Kennedy, 3307 N St. N. W., Georgetown, Washington, D.C. on the occasion of John Jr.’s Birth…Mrs. Kennedy would ask that I prepare a letter of thanks to the sender for her to sign, and this is one of the gifts that she offered me to take home. I donated the vast majority of these gifts to various charities, others I gave away to friends, relatives, etc., keeping the more interesting ones, such as this, for myself.” Provenance: Collection of Mary Barelli Gallagher, Bonhams, 2017. Barelli was secretary to Senator John F. Kennedy from 1953–1956, and personal secretary to Jackie Kennedy from 1956–1964. Starting Bid $200

The man who rescued JFK and the crew of the PT–109 12. PT-109 Letter by W. F. Liebenow. William ‘Bud’ Liebenow (1920–2017) was a naval lieutenant who guided his PT-157 vessel into Japanese territory to rescue John F. Kennedy and the crew of PT-109. Fascinating ALS signed “W. F. Libenow,” nine pages, 8.5 x 11, October 17, 1988. Lengthy letter recounting the circumstances surrounding the sinking of PT-109 and the subsequent rescue mission, in part: “We proceeded to our assigned patrol area. North of Gizo and started our pattern. We weren’t long on station before we spotted 4 Jap DD’s coming down the slot through Fergerson Passage. Immediately the 159 lined up to fire torpedoes (the 159 had Radar) the 157 (had no radar)…the 159 fired and immediately all hell broke loose. The 159’s torpedo tube caught fire and alerted the Japs to our presence. The 157 fired 2 torpedoes and began laying smoke to protect the 159…We covered for each other—all this time under intense fire from the Jap DD’s. The 162 and 109 did not attack. They had become separated from the section. (J.F.K. has come under a lot of criticism for this episode—It must be said that J.F.K. was to keep station on the PT162, so it was the 162 that got separated from the section)…The 157 and 159 finally got away and came together. The 159 had fire all 4 torpedoes and returned to base to try and load up. The 157 returned to petrol, since we still had 2 torpedoes. (We were now alone) Suddenly we saw a flash of light off in the distance. We headed that way. But saw nothing. This may or may not have been the sinking of the 109. After the 162 and 109 became separated they were joined by the PT 169, which had gotten separated from its section. Suddenly the 3 boats found themselves among the 4 Jap DD’s (Remember it was a very black night) the 162 and 169 fired torpedoes and got out. The 109 was too close to fire (a torpedo has to travel through the water a preset distance before it will arm itself and explode) anyway the 109 was so close that the DD Amagiri turned sharply and cut the 109 in half. The 100 octane gas exploded (this may have been the flash we saw from the 157)…The forecastle and cockpit area remained afloat and the surviving crew members clung to it until daylight then made their way to the little island they named ‘plum pudding’—For a week they stayed there. J.F.K. swam out nightly to try and intercept our patrols…A meeting was called of the ranking officers and boat captains to discuss a rescue attempt…Many thought it a…trick to lure the boats into the open. However, it was finally decided that the PT 157 would attempt the rescue… We knew the general area of the sinking. We followed the usual tactics for operation in enemy controlled waters—that is, ran at patrol speed to keep down our wake, changed course in a zig-zagging pattern…We then took directions from the 2 natives, who rode in the cockpit with me, to the rendezvous with J.F.K., he fired his 38 and a rifle, furnished by Evans as a signal and I answered with my .45. We hoisted him aboard and went for the rest of the crew.” In fine condition, with punch holes along the left edges. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 9


The Kennedy family’s last visit to Wexford

13. John F. Kennedy 1962 Madison Square Garden Birthday Program. Unsigned

original program for Kennedy’s famous birthday celebration held at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1962, titled ‘Happy Birthday, Mr. President,’ two pages, 8.25 x 10.5, featuring a list of performers and committee members, including Marilyn Monroe, whose sultry performance of the song ‘Happy Birthday, Mr. President’ has become infamous in pop culture lore. In fine condition, with a very light central vertical bend. Starting Bid $200

14. John F. Kennedy 1962 Madison Square Garden Birthday Ticket.

Unsigned original ticket stub for Kennedy’s famous birthday celebration held at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1962, 6.25 x 3.75, reading, “President Kennedy’s Birthday Party…Gala All Star Show,” and featuring an image of him on the left side. The ticket stub allowed entry to the mezzanine, section 208, row E, seat 12. The event has become infamous for Marilyn Monroe’s sultry performance of the song, ‘Happy Birthday, Mr. President.’ In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

15. Jacqueline Kennedy 1962 Original Photograph at Gandhi Memorial by Cecil Stoughton. Ce-

cil Stoughton’s own original vintage color glossy 10 x 8 photo of First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy visiting the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial in India on March 12, 1962, taken by official White House photographer Cecil W. Stoughton. Reverse bears “A Kodak Paper” watermarks. In very fine condition. From the collection of Cecil W. Stoughton. Starting Bid $200

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16. John F. Kennedy and Family 1963 Trip to Atoka Photo Album by Cecil Stoughton. Official White House

photographer Cecil Stoughton’s personal photo album containing 16 original vintage color 8 x 10 photos of the Kennedy family’s last trip to Atoka. The red calf leather photo album is stamped with decorative tooling on the front and back, with the spine stamped with Stoughton’s initials, “CWS,” and a title, “Last Trip to Atoka, Nov. 1963.” A wonderful set of 16 large original photos personally owned by Kennedy’s White House photographer, Cecil Stoughton, taken from the summer of 1963 at the Kennedy home in Atoka, Virginia—just weeks before President Kennedy’s assassination. Included within the album are photos of the Kennedy family with nanny Maud Shaw, the Kennedys riding a golf cart on the property, two photos of Caroline riding her horse, and the Wexford estate from various angles. In fine condition, with some purple staining to the first two plastic album pages. Starting Bid $300

17. Kennedy Family Coffee Mug.

Vintage creamcolored stonew a r e c o ff e e mug deriving from the dinnerware collection of John and Jacqueline Kennedy, used by the couple at their homes in either Martha’s Vineyard or Hyannisport. The mug stands 3.5˝ in height and bears an affixed Sotheby’s “Property from Kennedy Family Homes” auction label marked “435, 71.” In fine condition, with a small nick to rim. Accompanied by a University Archives authentication tag signed on the reverse by John Reznikoff. Provenance: Property from Kennedy Family Homes, Sotheby’s, 2005. Starting Bid $200


Valentine from the Secretary of Defense— “I may put it in Jack’s museum”

18. Jacqueline Kennedy Autograph Letter Signed to Robert McNamara. ALS signed “Jackie,” one page both

sides, 4.5 x 3.5, White House stationery card, no date. Letter to “Bob,” Robert McNamara, President Kennedy’s Secretary of Defense, in full: “The most marvelous Valentine I ever had! [Jackie draws a heart with arrow sketch] I may put it in Jack’s museum—A whole year gone by and you remembered and can still hit the same jolly note as last Valentine’s Day. I think that is quite fantastic. Apparently Godfrey McHugh [military aide to JFK] received an unsigned Valentine and is convinced it is from you.” In very fine condition. Accompanied by the original White House transmittal envelope, addressed by Kennedy to “The Secretary of Defense, By Hand,” and signed in the return address area, “Mrs. Kennedy.” Starting Bid $200

Kennedy family–owned ‘Whitby’ china

19. Kennedy Family Home-Owned Set of (2) Porcelain China Pieces. Two pieces of Kennedy family-owned transferprinted porcelain china in the ‘Whitby’ pattern, manufactured by the Syracuse China Company, comprising a bread plate and soup bowl. Both bear factory backmarks in overglaze green. In overall fine condition. Provenance: part of lot 178, Property from Kennedy Family Homes, Sotheby’s, 2005. Both retain their “Property from Kennedy Family Homes” labels affixed at the center. A desirable pairing of Kennedy family china. Starting Bid $200

20. Kennedy Family Mini Creamer. Vintage miniature cream-colored stoneware creamer pitcher by Vitrex, deriving from the dinnerware collection of John and Jacqueline Kennedy, used by the couple at their homes in either Martha’s Vineyard or Hyannisport. The creamer stands 2.25˝ in height and bears an affixed Sotheby’s “Property from Kennedy Family Homes” auction label marked “435, 71.” In fine condition, with adhesive residue to exterior. Accompanied by a University Archives authentication tag signed on the reverse by John Reznikoff. Provenance: Property from Kennedy Family Homes, Sotheby’s, 2005. Starting Bid $200

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“The more that is written and discussed about foreign policy the more meaningful becomes our use of free speech” 21. John F. Kennedy Hand-Edited Letter. Unsigned personal draft letter, one page, 7 x 10.25, White House letterhead, April 23, 1962. Letter to Californian Congressman James Roosevelt, in full: “Many thanks for your letter. Contrary to what you may have heard I am not in the least concerned about the publication of the liberal papers, except that it may embarrass politically some good Congressmen. While I have not agreed for a long period of time with many of the writers, I do think that the more that is written and discussed about foreign policy the more meaningful becomes our use of free speech and the more careful becomes our analysis of present and future policies. The fact is that the bankruptcy of the Republican party has been (greatly) exposed (increased) by their concentration on this wholly synthetic issue.” President Kennedy makes a few handwritten emendations in pencil, adding “good” and “exposed,” while striking through “greatly” and “increased.” In fine condition, with staple holes to the upper left corner. Accompanied by the final onionskin draft of the letter. A volume of twelve anonymously written essays, The Liberal Papers, attracted the ire of the GOP, and in particular former Vice President Richard Nixon, for its apparent advocacy and ‘unilateral goodwill toward the international Communist conspiracy.’ In spite of a public letter from the White House repudiating the stance of the essays—a move no doubt aimed at curbing Republican agitation—Kennedy never formally denounced the publication’s ideas; he simply didn’t always agree with its writers. Starting Bid $200

The 21st round from JFK’s inaugural salute 22. John F. Kennedy Inauguration 21-Gun Salute Mortar Shell Casing. Unique

75mm M5A1 Type I mortar shell casing fired as the final round of the 21-gun salute at President John F. Kennedy’s inauguration as president on January 20, 1961. The casing measures 7.25˝ tall and 3.25˝ in diameter, and is engraved on the base: “75 MM M5A1, Type I, BB-1-386, BB. CO. 1944.” Contained in a black mortar container tube, marked on the inner sleeve in pencil: “21st Round at President Kennedy’s Inauguration,1/20/61.” In fine condition, with expected wear from use. The shell casing originates from the collection of Carroll W. Campbell, who fired the shot as a member of the ‘Saluting Battery’ of the 1st Battle Group, 3rd Infantry (‘The Old Guard’). Accompanied by a letter of provenance signed by Campbell, in part: “Beginning approximately 6/1/1960 thru my discharge date of 4/1/1962 I was a member of the 1st BG, 3rd Inf. stationed at Arlington National Cemetery. This particular group consisted of line companied A, B, C, and D, Caisson and Guns. My unit was known as the ‘Saluting Battery’ and our motto/ slogan was ‘Have guns will travel.’ My gun platoon/saluting battery fired for funerals in Arlington Cemetery and also for arrivals of foreign Heads of State. Also we fired for various dignitaries at several areas of the public and airports in the Washington, D.C. area.” Also includes an image of Campbell outside the headquarters of ‘The Old Guard.’ A remarkable piece of history honoring Kennedy’s ascent to the nation’s highest office. Starting Bid $500

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Visual archive of President Kennedy sitting for his Truman Library portrait at the ‘Winter White House’ 23. John F. Kennedy Negative and Photograph Collection. Remark-

able assortment of 19 original negatives of President John F. Kennedy at the ‘Winter White House,’ the Kennedys Palm Beach residency at 1095 N. Ocean Boulevard, in December 1962 and January 1963. The images were taken by photographer Eddie Johnson, who traveled to the Floridian getaway as the personal assistant of Elaine de Kooning, a celebrated portrait artist recently commissioned to paint President Kennedy’s official portrait for the Truman Library.

View additional photographs online at www.RRAuction.com

A total of nine strips, ranging in size from 2.5 x 2.5 to 2.5 x 8.25, feature 19 images of either JFK, De Kooning, or both, with all but two images featuring the president, who is either captured in a full-length stance or in a seated pose reading or conversing with Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman. The negatives include their original sleeves, which are dated either December 29, 1962 or January 3, 1963. Also included are two 35mm negative strips, with one containing six images and the other three images, with subjects similar to the above negatives. Additionally, the lot features four handwritten letters and one typed letter from Johnson to his family, dated between December 21, 1962 and January 15, 1963, with the earliest letter reading in part: “From Palm Beach! I am finally going to spend Christmas in a place where it’s warm (I hope!). Elaine de Kooning is going to Palm Beach to paint the President’s portrait (yes, J.F.K., himself!!) and she’s taking me along as her assistant. I leave today in a Rambler station wagon—she is going down by train.—I know that this all sounds incredible, but even Elaine can hardly believe it…Elaine decided she would want photographs & canvasses stretched, etc. in Fla., and apparently decided I’m the only one she could trust.” Another letter dated January 8, 1963, reads in part: “I hardly know how to tell you everything—first I suppose, as is obvious by the photos, we did manage to get into the ‘inner sanctum’ to do the portrait! In fact, I think we became almost part of the house hold & ended up being very familiar with all Kennedy’s secret service men, secretary, etc., etc. Today was JFK’s last day in Palm Beach, but Elaine has decided to stick around another week or two…We then got him to ourselves a couple of times on different days for short periods of time (this is when I took the most photos)…JFK finally had to take a break from the conference & come over to satisfy his curiosity , & the whole group began to go over the drawings & small paintings. Jackie picked out one she liked & Elaine gave it to her—it was actually the best one she had done. Elaine & I agree. Mrs. JFK has a pretty good eye.” In overall fine condition. Accompanied by a group of 13 modern photo prints, 11 matte-finish and two glossy, either 8 x 10 or 10 x 8, containing select images of the president and De Kooning, with reverse of glossy photos bearing an Eddie Johnson copyright stamp dated to 1963; a CD and two DVD-R discs containing the images; a letter from a Smithsonian representative relating to the forwarding of the images; and two typed draft letters from Johnson to President Bill Clinton, which notes: “Only four of my photos from this period have ever been published: two in Life Magazine, May 8, 1964 and two in the Sotheby’s Catalogue for the auction of the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Estate.” An exceptional array of unique JFK photographs, handsomely portraying the president while on ‘working holiday’ at the fabled ‘Winter White House.’ Starting Bid $200

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Uninscribed Inaugural edition of Profiles in Courage

24. John F. Kennedy Signed Book. Signed

book: Profiles in Courage. Inaugural edition. NY: Harper & Row, 1961. Hardcover with dust jacket, 6 x 8.75, 266 pages. Signed on an opening page in black ballpoint, “John Kennedy.” Autographic condition: fine. Book condition: VG+/VG-, with wear, small chips, and staining to the dust jacket. Starting Bid $300

Special award certificate to a ‘Voice of America’ radio station for operating during the Cuban Missile Crisis 25. John F. Kennedy Signed Merit Award. Scarce DS as president, one page, 11 x 10.5, no date but circa 1962–63. An award certificate to a Key West radio station for its service during the Cuban Missile Crisis, in full: “For Service of Special Merit, The Government of the United States of America commends the dedicated and patriotic service of radio station—WKWF for its performance during the Cuban crises of October–November 1963. This station voluntarily cancelled its own programs and instead, from dusk to dawn, during this period relayed programs of the Voice of America to Cuba. In so doing, it performed a service of great value to the American people and Government in a time of great crisis. In recognition thereof, this certificate is rendered by a grateful Nation.” Signed at the conclusion by President John F. Kennedy, US Information Agency Director Edward R. Murrow, and FCC Chairman Newton N. Minow. Matted and framed to an overall size of 17.5 x 17.5. In very good condition, with creasing, a tear to the upper left blank area, and overall dampstaining to both the document and the mat; Kennedy’s bold signature is completely unaffected. The ‘Voice of America’ were propaganda radio broadcasts that began during World War II, sent worldwide by the US State Department to advance a western point of view. When Russians jammed broadcasts into Cuba in the early 1960s, FCC Chairman Newton Minow called several commercial radio stations into service to relay the broadcasts on different frequencies. WKWF, located in Key West, Florida, was a natural choice, given its close proximity to the island nation. Speaking with the Chicago Tribune in 2017, Minow related the story behind these certificates: ‘The Russians had jammed the initial signal so Kennedy tasked me with finding new signals that would reach the island. And when the crisis was over, the stations wanted to know where they should send the bill. The White House told me there was no money for that. So I said, ‘Look, can the president invite some of these guys to lunch?’ Everyone got one of these certificates and a kiss goodbye, then went home happy.’ In addition to the noteworthy signatures of President Kennedy and Newton Minow, the award also boasts the autograph of Edward R. Murrow, perhaps the most famous American war correspondent and broadcast journalist of the mid-20th century. A rare style of document from Kennedy’s presidency, closely associated with his historic leadership as the world teetered on the brink of nuclear war. Starting Bid $500

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28. John F. Kennedy White House VIP Gift Soap Set of (3) Large Bars.

26. John F. Kennedy Signed Photograph. Vintage

semi-glossy 8 x 10 photo of President Kennedy, signed and inscribed in the wide lower border in blue ballpoint, “For Julia Wolfe—with warm personal regards, John F. Kennedy.” In very good to fine condition, with light edge rippling, two areas of staining to the emulsion, and an associated small area of surface loss to the right border. The consignor notes that this originates from the estate of a manicurist who once did Kennedy’s fingernails in Palm Beach, Florida. Starting Bid $300

Boxed set of soap given to VIP guests at the White House during the Kennedy administration, measuring 7.5 x 4 x 1.25, containing three large bars of white soap (still sealed in their original wrappers), impressed with images of the White House on one side and the presidential seal on the other. The handsome white box is lined with gold foil and embossed on the cover with golden images of the White House and presidential seal, with “Presidential” inscribed in between. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

27. Jacqueline Kennedy Valentine Collage. Two

items from the estate of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara: an envelope bearing a pre-printed free frank of the first lady’s signature, 6.5 x 5, addressed in Jacqueline Kennedy’s hand to “The Secretary of Defense,” and marked with delivery instructions, “By Hand”; and a valentine scrapbook collage presumed to have been crafted by Mrs. Kennedy, made of two 9 x 12 sheets of red construction paper, tied at the left with red yarn. Affixed to the pages are newspaper clippings about a private dinner-dance party hosted by the President and Mrs. Kennedy at the White House on February 9, 1962, including a humorous collage that shows JFK and McNamara dancing together on the second page, and Jackie dancing with McNamara on the third. This valentine collage was found with a collection of Jackie’s letters to McNamara. In overall fine condition, with a light stain to the envelope, and light wear to the collage. Starting Bid $200

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30. John F. K e n n e d y ’s Birthday: M a r i a C a llas Original Photograph.

29. John F. Kennedy White House VIP Gift Soap Set of (3) Small Bars. Boxed set of soap given to VIP guests

at the White House during the Kennedy administration, measuring 7.5 x 2 x 1, containing three small bars of white soap (still sealed in their original wrappers), impressed with images of the White House on one side and the presidential seal on the other. The handsome white box is lined with gold foil and embossed on the cover with golden images of the White House and presidential seal, with “Presidential” inscribed in between. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Cecil Stoughton’s own original glossy 7.5 x 7.5 silver gelatin photo of John F. Kennedy visiting with opera singer Maria Callas at the Krim residence following his famed 1962 Madison Square Garden birthday party, taken by official White House photographer Cecil Stoughton and kept as his personal file copy, with his address label on the reverse. Also seen in the image is Adlai Stevenson, at center. Reverse bears “This Paper Manufactured by Kodak” watermarks (indicating that it was printed later), a caption, and an affixed Cecil Stoughton address label. In very good to fine condition, with areas of light silvering. From the collection of Cecil W. Stoughton. Starting Bid $200

Biographies from Jackie’s personal library 31. Jacqueline Kennedy’s Collection of Seven Biographies. Seven hardcover

biographies from Jacqueline Kennedy’s personal library, several of which are signed and inscribed to her by the author or gift-giver. Includes: Uneasy Lies the Head by King Hussein of Jordan, inscribed by the king; Hassan II, King of Morocco by Rom Landau, inscribed by the author; David: Biografia de un Rey by Juan Bosch, inscribed by the author; The Last Tsar: The Life and Death of Nicholas II by Edvard Radzinsky, inscribed by the author; A Royal Recluse: Memories of Ludwig II of Bavaria, by Werner Bertram, inscribed in an unknown hand; Queen Victoria: Leaves from a Journal, inscribed in an unknown hand; and Lorenzo de Medici, by E. Armstrong, uninscribed. Several retain either her personal bookplate, or the Sotheby’s “The Estate of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis” bookplate, affixed inside. In overall very good to fine condition. Provenance: Lot #894, The Estate of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Sotheby’s, April 23–26, 1996. Starting Bid $200

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Jackie’s chic Dior clutch 32. Jacqueline Kennedy’s Dior Purse. Jacqueline

Kennedy’s personally-owned and -used black satin foldover clutch by Christian Dior, measuring 8.75 x 7, featuring a snap closure with two expanding interior compartments and a pocket on the reverse. The front flap is elegantly decorated with a bow, and “Christian Dior” is stamped in gold on the front of the pocket inside. Scattered soiling to front flap in inner compartments, a frayed area on the front from rubbing against the metal snap fastener, and general wear from frequent use, otherwise fine condition. This clutch originates from the estate of Officer James H. Boyer, Sr., who served on the US Capitol police force beginning in 1949. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from a descendent of Boyer, in part: “While continuing to serve on the Capitol police force, Boyer became a personal driver for the Kennedy family, often being called on at late hours, and was employed by Jackie Kennedy as a handyman at the Kennedy’s Georgetown home. Once, while she was clearing her closet, Jackie offered Boyer some of her worn shoes and handbags to give to his wife. This black satin clutch purse with ‘Christian Dior’ stamped in gold is one of those gifts.” With superior provenance this gorgeous clutch purse by an iconic designer is the epitome of Jackie Kennedy’s classic style as one of America’s greatest fashion icons of the era. Starting Bid $300

The first lady’s personally-worn designer heels 3 3 . J a c q u e l i n e K e n n e d y ’s Personally-Owned and -Worn High Heeled Shoes. Jacqueline Kennedy’s

personally-owned and -worn pair of dark cream-colored high-heeled designer shoes with finely textured fabric uppers and leather soles, printed with the brand name in gold script on the right insole, “A Revette Creation.” In well-worn condition with expected wear. These shoes originate from the estate of Officer James H. Boyer, Sr., who served on the US Capitol police force beginning in 1949. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from a descendent of Boyer, in part: “While continuing to serve on the Capitol police force, Boyer became a personal driver for the Kennedy family, often being called on at late hours, and was employed by Jackie Kennedy as a handyman at the Kennedy’s Georgetown home. Once, while she was clearing her closet, Jackie offered Boyer some of her worn shoes and handbags to give to his wife. This pair of off-white textured fabric shoes…is one of those gifts.” Jackie was quite self-conscious about the size of her feet, with each of these measuring 10˝ long. A staple in high-end fashion since the 1940s, A Revette Creation shoes are synonymous with classic styling and enduring workmanship. Derived from the closet of a first lady synonymous with style, this pair of high-heels represents a uniquely intimate piece of fashion history. Starting Bid $300

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“President Kennedy’s Wounds,” by his attending surgeon 34. John F. Kennedy Assassination: Dr. Robert McClelland Signed Sketch. Surgeon at Parkland Hospital who attended to President Kennedy after he was shot on November 22, 1963. Original signed felt tip sketch of “President Kennedy’s Wounds” on a white 8.5 x 11 cardstock sheet, signed “Robert McClelland, M.D., Dec. 22, 2016.” The sketch shows President Kennedy’s head in profile, with the entry and exit wounds labeled on the head and neck. In fine condition. This version of McClelland’s sketch has two wounds coming from the front: a “probable” entry point at the hair line, and then the second entry wound to lower neck. McClelland has always maintained that the mortal wound—the head wound—came from the front, likely fired from the ‘Grassy Knoll’ ahead of Kennedy’s motorcade; he maintains that there were at least two shooters and that the assassination was likely a conspiracy involving government elements. Starting Bid $200

35. Kennedy Assassination: Window Sash from the Texas School Book Depository. An origi-

nal window sash from the Texas School Book Depository that was in the building when the shots were fired on November 22, 1963. The window measures 40.5 x 32.25 and retains its original dark green paint, as well as the lock hardware and rope cords on the sides; unfortunately, the original glass was shattered in transit. In good to very good condition, with soiling and wear, and glass broken as mentioned.

The Texas School Book Depository— located at 411 Elm Street in Dallas, Texas—was the building where Lee Harvey Oswald worked on November 22, 1963, from where official governmental investigations concluded that the shots that killed President John F. Kennedy (and wounded Texas Governor John Connally) were fired. The Texas School Book Depository building was built in 1901. From 1963–1970 the Texas School Book Depository leased and occupied the entire building. In 1977, Dallas County purchased the building, and began their first phase of renovations to its exterior. After exterior renovations were completed, the building was dedicated on March 29, 1981. In 1986, phase two building renovations took place. Original windows were removed and energy conservation replica windows replaced the originals. Farris Rookstool, III served as a principal historian in the planning of the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. When all of the original window sashes were discarded by Dallas County, the county gave him the entire lot of discarded windows. Rookstool has had them privately stored since 1986. Rookstool is a former FBI Analyst who served on the FBI JFK Task Force and is currently an Emmy Award–winning historian. Starting Bid $500

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Original window from the Texas School Book Depository

36. Kennedy Assassination: Window Sash from the Texas School Book Depository. An original window sash from the Texas School Book Depository that

was in the building when the shots were fired on November 22, 1963. The window measures 40.5 x 32.25 and retains its original glass and dark green paint, as well as the lock hardware and rope cords on the sides. In very good condition, with soiling and wear; a few chipped fragments are included.

The Texas School Book Depository—located at 411 Elm Street in Dallas, Texas—was the building where Lee Harvey Oswald worked on November 22, 1963, from where official governmental investigations concluded that the shots that killed President John F. Kennedy (and wounded Texas Governor John Connally) were fired. The Texas School Book Depository building was built in 1901. From 1963–1970 the Texas School Book Depository leased and occupied the entire building. In 1977, Dallas County purchased the building, and began their first phase of renovations to its exterior. After exterior renovations were completed, the building was dedicated on March 29, 1981. In 1986, phase two building renovations took place. Original windows were removed and energy conservation replica windows replaced the originals. Farris Rookstool, III served as a principal historian in the planning of the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. When all of the original window sashes were discarded by Dallas County, the county gave him the entire lot of discarded windows. Rookstool has had them privately stored since 1986. Rookstool is a former FBI Analyst who served on the FBI JFK Task Force and is currently an Emmy Award–winning historian. Starting Bid $1000

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Father James Thompson’s rosary beads from Parkland Memorial Hospital 37. John F. Kennedy: Father James Thompson’s Rosary from Parkland Hospital. Father

James Thompson’s rosary bead necklace which was present with him at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, Texas, while alongside Father Oscar Huber to administer the last rites to President John F. Kennedy and to comfort First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy with prayer in her time of grief. The gorgeous rosary has silvery pearl-type beads strung on a fine metal chain, features a sterling silver miraculous medal and sterling silver crucifix, and measures approximately 24.5˝ long. In fine condition. Additionally includes a funerary cross which belonged to Father Thompson; two rare pamphlets of his memoir, “Around One O’Clock,” printed in a limited edition of 1000, both signed in fountain pen, “James N. Thompson, C.M.,” with one dated, “Nov. 22, 1964”; and a funeral card honoring Rev. Thompson. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from Father Thompson’s grand-niece, in part: “The rosary beads were given to my Great Uncle, upon his placement at Holy Trinity Church, [Dallas, Tx.] from my Grandmother [Mary Magdalene Thompson] who was his only sister… My Great Uncle carried these rosary beads either in his pocket or his priest’s jacket…these rosary beads were not only very special to him, but there was quite some history behind them also. He told me, that these rosary beads were present with him, at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, Tx., when he was present, along with Fr. Oscar Huber administering the Sacrament of Last Rites to President John F. Kennedy. He ended his story by simply stating, ‘That these rosary beads never leave my sight, are with me all the time, and one day will return to your Grandmother, should I die, before her.’ I was just a kid, and so enthralled with the whole story and was amazed, that my Great Uncle was a part of history—sad as it may be. My Great Uncle’s memoirs are limited to only 1000 copies. It was told to me by my Grandmother and Mother, that the late Bobby Kennedy wanted my Great Uncle to put down his recollection of that tragic day, and he would have them printed.” In the four-page memoir pamphlet “Around One O’Clock,” Thompson outlines the events of his day on November 22, 1963, offering yet another firsthand perspective of the tragedy—he was sitting in the rectory when he saw the news on TV that the president had been shot. He remembered standing up and saying, ‘Somebody’s got to go,’ as Parkland Memorial Hospital was part of Holy Trinity’s parish and the priests went there regularly. Father Thompson readied the car as Father Huber gathered his sick-call kit, and Thompson drove them to the hospital. They met no resistance from security when they arrived, as the first lady had apparently asked for a priest to be called. He dropped Father Huber off at the emergency room entrance, and parked the car before going inside. In the memoir, Father Thompson recalls the scene in Trauma Room One: “Father Huber was standing at the President’s head reading the prayers for the dying. The President’s wife, holding his right hand, was beside the President, standing there immobile as a statue…I did manage to offer a Sign of the Cross in absolution and one as a Blessing. Then Father Huber began to pray aloud the Lord’s Prayer, etc., and all answered in articulate response, the President’s wife seeming to lead us in response.” These rosary beads, always present in Father Thompson’s pocket, would have been the ones he utilized while performing these important Catholic rites and rituals. An amazing religious relic from one of the most tragic days in American history. Starting Bid $1000

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Manchester’s The Death of a President, inscribed to assassination cameraman Abraham Zapruder 38. John F. Kennedy: Abe Zapruder Personally Owned Book.

Signed book: The Death of a President by William Manchester. First edition. NY: Harper & Row, 1967. Hardcover with dust jacket, 6.5 x 9.5, 710 pages. Signed and inscribed on the half-title page in black felt tip, “For Abe Zapruder—With gratitude and warmest regards—Wm. Manchester, 13.III.67.” Includes the original Harper & Row “compliments” card, noting, “At the Author’s request”; the Harper & Row advance copy notice card; and an envelope panel addressed by Zapruder to his assistant Lillian Rogers, postmarked at Dallas on November 24, 1970, incorporating his signature, “Mr. A. Zapruder,” in the return address area. In fine condition, with a small area of toning at the bottom of the signed page, and some light wear and small edge tears to the dust jacket. According to the book’s index, Zapruder is mentioned more than a dozen times.

Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the son of Lillian Rogers, in part: “My mother, deceased, Lillian Rogers worked for Abaraham Zapruder at the time of the JFK assassination…On that day she urged Mr. Zapruder to go back to his home and get his movie camera which he did and the rest is history. She always felt that her legacy was that if she had not persuaded Mr. Zapruder to get his camera the world would probably not know much about the event. I acquired the copy of the book ‘The Death of a President’ signed by the author as part of my mother’s estate…I had seen it once before she died and she told me Mr. Zapruder had given it to her.” A remarkable association piece related to the Kennedy assassination. Starting Bid $200

39. Lee Harvey Oswald Limited Edition Mug Shot Photograph. Limited

edition 10 x 8 silver gelatin print of Lee Harvey Oswald’s mug shots taken in Dallas, Texas, on November 23, 1963, following his arrest in connection with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The print, numbered 22/50, was produced from an original negative by University Archives. The negative was found in the papers of photography expert Cecil Wayne Kirk, and was used in connection with his testimony before the 1978 House Select Committee on Assassinations. In very fine condition. Starting Bid $200

40. Lee Harvey Oswald Pair of Limited Edition Photographs. Insightful pairing of limited edition semi-glossy 8 x 10 silver gelatin prints of Lee Harvey Oswald, both numbered 13/50: one showing Oswald, on leave from the USMC, holding a rifle and smiling on the side of a rural road, and the other depicting Oswald holding his daughter June on a front yard walkway. In overall very fine condition. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from University Archives stating that the “prints were made from unique negatives purchased directly from Lee Harvey Oswald’s brother, Robert, in 2015.” Starting Bid $200

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Oswald’s overcoat— purchased as a Marine in Japan and worn as an expat in Minsk 41. Lee Harvey Oswald’s Personally-Owned and -Worn Overcoat. Lee Harvey Oswald’s personally-owned and -worn blue

single-breasted, heavy blue wool overcoat with three buttons down the front, with his name finely embroidered in yellow thread above the inner pocket on the right side, “Lee H Oswald.” On the other side is a maker’s label, “Kawashima, Tailor, Yokohama, Japan.” In fine condition, with light expected wear. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from his older brother, Robert L. Oswald, in part: “Lee purchased this overcoat while still in the Marine Corps during his time at Naval Air Force Facility Atsugi near Yokahama, Japan from September 1957 to October 1958. The coat appears in one known photograph, taken c. 1961–1962 of Oswald and Marina on a bridge in Minsk. (The photograph became exhibit 1392 in the Warren Commission investigation of the Kennedy assassination).” A striking, well-documented piece from the assassin’s personal wardrobe. Starting Bid $1000

Chess set belonging to the teenaged Oswald

42. Lee Harvey Oswald’s Chess Set. Vintage chess set given to Lee Harvey Oswald by his mother after the family had moved to New Orleans in 1954, consisting of 14 white plastic pieces—one king, one queen, one bishop, two rooks, two knights, and seven pawns—and 14 red plastic pieces—one king, one queen, one knight, two bishops, two rooks, and seven pawns. Housed in the original burgundy leather box, 6.75 x 2.25 x 4, with an embossed gold image of a knight piece on the lid. In very good to fine condition, with moderate wear to the box and lid (which is detached but present); the chessmen themselves are in fine condition. When Marguerite Oswald was summoned to testify before the President’s Commission on the assassination of President Kennedy on February 12, 1964, a portion of her testimony related to the various childhood hobbies of her son: “Lee played Monopoly. Lee played chess. Lee had a stamp collection, and even wrote to other young men and exchanged stamps, sir. And Lee read history books, books too deep for a child his age.” Starting Bid $500

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May 8, 2019 | JOHN F. KENNEDY


43. Jack Ruby’s Black Trousers. Jack Ru-

by’s personally-owned and -worn black trousers, marked on an inside pocket in an unknown hand, “Jack Ruby.” In fine condition, with ink or dye staining to the inside of the pants along the waist and pockets. Accompanied by a notarized certificate of authenticity signed by his brother, Earl Ruby, stating that this pair of pants was “once owned and worn by my brother Jack Ruby and left to me in his will.” Starting Bid $200

Poignant JFK memorial letterhead: “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country”

Evidence from Lattimer’s extensive ballistics tests 44. John F. Kennedy Assassination Ballistic Test Limousine Plexiglass. Rectangular

piece of clear plexiglass, 7.75 x 6 x 0.25, featuring a bullet hole in the right side, with notations reading, “Front Side. 1-1-85. 1/4˝ Plexi-same type used in JFK limousine roof. JKL 86-57. Gookin.” Originates from the collection of Dr. John K. Lattimer, who conducted extensive research into the assassination. Accompanied by Lattimer’s original file folder, labeled “86/57 JFK Bubble Top Plastic with 30:06 Bullet Hole in it by Gookin.” In fine condition. Ostensibly, Dr. Lattimer was experimenting to see if a similar bullet would have significantly slowed down when it penetrated the plexiglass of the limousine’s roof, had the bubbletop been used. In addition to being the first non-governmental medical specialist to review assassination evidence, he conducted numerous ballistic tests, even writing a book on the subject entitled Kennedy and Lincoln: Medical & Ballistic Comparisons of Their Assassinations. Starting Bid $200

45. Jacqueline Kennedy Pair of Handwritten Notes.

Two items: an unsigned handwritten note written at the top of a TLS addressed to “Mrs. Aristotle Onassis” by Commander Albert L. Casassa, one page, 8.5 x 11, The American Legion, John F. Kennedy Memorial Post No. 287 letterhead, May 6, 1969. Kennedy’s note, written to Dave Powers, a close friend and special assistant to her late husband, relates to Casassa’s request to make her, Caroline, and John, Jr., honorary members of various American Legion branches, in full: “What do I say—? OK if hurts him too much not too [sic]—but can’t you say if it’s named for JFK we feel we belong to it anyway—I guess we should let him join us, you decide”; and a handwritten note on an off-white 6 x 3.5 sheet, unsigned, addressed to her personal secretary Nancy Tuckerman, in full: “What is most tactful answer—I don’t mind getting them & seeing them if it isn’t imposing.” In overall fine condition. Starting Bid $200

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46. Jacqueline Kennedy Hand-drawn Poster. Hand-drawn poster by Jackie Kennedy honoring the retirement of White House Chief Usher J. B. West, accomplished in red, blue, and green watercolor on an off-white 9 x 13 sheet. Mrs. Kennedy draws a compass at the top, to the left of which she writes, “Mr. West is the best.” Below, she signs on behalf of herself and several former first ladies: “Eleanor,” “Bess,” “Mamie,” “Jackie,” “Lady Bird,” and “Pat (Thelma),” as well as her longtime friend and White House social secretary Nancy Tuckerman, her press secretary Pamela Turner, and Caroline and John’s nanny, Maud Shaw. In the lower right in pink, she writes, “Welcome Home, March 7, 1969,” and sketches a heart with an arrow passing through it. In very good to fine condition, with scattered foxing, and wear to the top edge. Starting Bid $200

Cecil Stoughton’s passenger manifest for the Air Force One flight that carried JFK’s body and President Johnson home from Dallas 47. John F. Kennedy Post-Assassination Air Force One Manifest.

Extraordinary official original passenger manifest for the Air Force One flight that carried John F. Kennedy’s body home from Dallas to Andrews Air Force Base on November 22, 1963, one page, 8 x 10.5, addressed to official White House photographer Cecil W. Stoughton and signed in the lower right corner in ballpoint, “Sgt. C. Chance.” The manifest begins: “Captain Stoughton: Here is the list of passengers aboard AF-1, Dallas to Andrews, on November 22nd.” The list includes the newly inaugurated “President Johnson,” “Mrs. Johnson,” and “Mrs. Kennedy,” along with 38 officials, aides, assistants, and journalists, including Kenneth O’Donnell, Dave Powers, Malcolm Kilduff (who made the public announcement of Kennedy’s death), Chester V. Clifton, Godfrey T. McHugh, Evelyn Lincoln, Secret Service agents, and others. Mounted, matted, and framed to an overall size of 15 x 17.5. In very good to fine condition, with some creasing to the edges. From the collection of Cecil W. Stoughton. This is one of few known official passenger manifests from the Air Force One flight that carried Kennedy’s body and the newly sworn-in President Johnson back to Washington, DC, from Dallas on the night of the assassination. It was given to Cecil Stoughton, who captured the famous images of JFK’s casket being loaded onto the plane and Johnson’s inauguration aboard AF-1 before the plane took off, so that he would be able to identify the subjects of these photographs. Rather than returning to Washington aboard the jet, Stoughton rushed to the offices of the Dallas Morning News to develop and distribute the historic images. These important events are well-related in Garrett Graff’s two-part article ‘Angel is Airborne,’ published in the Washingtonian magazine, which comments on discrepancies between known passenger manifests, and observes that ‘we may never know precisely how many people were aboard Air Force One as it took off for Washington.’ A steward’s handwritten flight manifest, now held by the LBJ Presidential Library, erroneously lists Stoughton as a passenger, as does the Secret Service’s official manifest, created in February 1964 by Assistant Special Agent in Charge Roy H. Kellerman for submission to the Warren Commission. Meanwhile, Paul E. Landis, Jr., who was assigned to protect Jacqueline Kennedy and helped load JFK’s casket into the plane, is absent from these manifests. This manifest correctly omits Stoughton, but, like the others, does not include Landis. A fascinating piece of Kennedy history, lending insight into who was on the fateful flight home from Dallas. Starting Bid $500 24 |

May 8, 2019 | JOHN F. KENNEDY


Unpublished archive remembering ‘The Human Touch’ of John F. Kennedy 48. John F. Kennedy: John G. W. Mahanna Manuscript. Remarkable archive of notes, outline, and unfinished draft for The Human Touch, an unpublished memoir by John G. W. Mahanna, a Western Massachusetts journalist who recounts his nearly two-decade association and friendship with John F. Kennedy. The archive includes 21 pages of handwritten manuscript notes, a 101-page hand-corrected photocopied typescript outline, and a 43-page photocopied typescript that includes drafts of the first several chapters of the memoir. The larger typescript outline bears numerous handwritten corrections while the draft chapters include both handwritten and paste-up edits.

The opening pages of the outline describe Mahanna’s first encounter with Kennedy, which reads, in part: “When I first met Jack Kennedy in 1945 at the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco, he was a special writer for the New York Journal American and other Hearst newspapers, representing International News Service…Our meeting came quite by accident…While walking through the streets of the city, I decided to check my baggage at the nearest hotel...I wandered about the lobby, hoping to see a familiar face. While sitting on a couch in the lobby, a young fellow, dressed in a tweed jacket, khaki trousers, brown loafers and carrying a cane came up to me and said: ‘You look pretty depressed, pal, anything I can do for you?’ He introduced himself as Jack Kennedy…when he learned I was from Massachusetts, he placed his hand on my shoulder and told me to wait there a few minutes and he would be right back. In less than five minutes he returned with the manager of the Palace Hotel, explaining to him that if he could not find a room for me, to put a cot in his room and make me comfortable until a room could be found.” An excerpt found among the manuscript notes displays Kennedy’s admiration for the Democratic ideal, the office of the presidency, and then towards his own fondness for stirring oration: “He liked to quote Lincoln: ‘There are few things wholly evil or wholly good. Almost everything, especially of government policy, is an inseparable compound of the two, so that our best judgment of the preponderance between them is continually demanded.’” In overall fine condition. Accompanied by a copy of Mahanna’s The Seated Lincoln, a booklet dedicated to the Lincoln statue on the National Mall. Starting Bid $200

49. Dave Powers Handwritten Timeline of 1963. Two pages of handwritten notes from the estate of Kennedy’s friend and special assistant David Powers, comprising one toned 11.75 x 9 sheet and one 11.75 x 9.5 manila folder, containing timelines of the tragic year of 1963. The first lists dates from January 1st through November 25th, with interesting content including: “Jan 1: President and 73,380 fans saw Alabama defeat Oklahoma in Orange Bowl 17-0…Jan 8: Unveiling of Mona Lisa at the National Gallery of Art…Jan 14: State of Union Message ‘It’s not as bad as it might be’…Feb 5: 50 mile hikes, Bobby Kennedy…May 12: Address over nationwide TV and Radio concerning Birmingham, Alabama (bombings & race riots)…May 21: Greeted Gordon Cooper who had completed 22 orbits on May 16 & 17…June 23–July 2: Trip to Germany, Ireland, England, Rome, Naples…July 4th: Weekend at Cape Cod. President never felt better…October 19: Last Visit to Boston…October 20: Last Visit with Father at Hyannisport…November 22: Fort Worth, Dallas…November 23: White House Mass…November 24: White House to Capital…November 25: White House to St. Mathews to Arlington Cemetery.” The notes on the manila folder list several of the same events, with the dates constrained to January 29–July 2. Mounted, matted, and framed with an image of Powers and a certificate of authenticity from the sale of his estate to an overall size of 23 x 25. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 25


Jackie’s 1967 Nikon 50. Jacqueline Kennedy’s Nikon 35mm Camera. Jac-

queline Kennedy’s personallyowned and -used Nikon F singlelens reflex, manual focus camera, serial no. 6796318, fitted with a Nikkor 35–135mm 1:3.5–4.5 zoom lens and leather strap. The serial number dates the camera to between December 1966 and March 1967. In fine cosmetic condition; working condition unknown. Provenance: Sotheby’s, February 2005 Kennedy Homes Auction; ex. The Frank Harvey Kennedy Collection.

Well before she became the focal point of the world’s paparazzi, Jacqueline Kennedy was making a name for herself behind the camera. In the fall of 1951, a 23-year-old Jacqueline Bouvier landed her first job as the ‘Inquiring Camera Girl,’ a roving photojournalist position for the Washington Times Herald newspaper that involved taking pictures of people she interviewed on the street. In addition to her coverage of President Eisenhower’s 1951 inauguration and Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation, her impromptu photo-shoots led to a chance encounter with a soon-to-be senator from Massachusetts. As photography helped fashion Kennedy’s keen eye for detail and framing, she developed a fondness for the craft itself, attesting that she loved ‘ferreting out people’s secrets and exploring how a photo—an exterior exposure—can reveal their interior.’ Synonymous with style and grace, Kennedy’s imprint on modern beauty remains unrivaled amongst first ladies, with this camera existing as a unique extension of one of Kennedy’s foremost passions. Starting Bid $300

Jackie’s Nikon camera lens 51. Jacqueline Kennedy’s Nikon Camera Lens. Jacqueline Kennedy’s

personally-owned and -used Nikon Nikkor 50mm 1:1.4 camera lens, serial no. 5286561, manufactured in the 1970s. Complete with front and rear lens caps. In fine condition. Provenance: Sotheby’s, February 2005 Kennedy Homes Auction; ex. The Frank Harvey Kennedy Collection. Accompanied by copies of the Sotheby’s invoice and several images of Kennedy holding various types of cameras.

Well before she became the focal point of the world’s paparazzi, Jacqueline Kennedy was making a name for herself behind the camera. In the fall of 1951, a 23-year-old Jacqueline Bouvier landed her first job as the ‘Inquiring Camera Girl,’ a roving photojournalist position for the Washington Times Herald newspaper that involved taking pictures of people she interviewed on the street. In addition to her coverage of President Eisenhower’s 1951 inauguration and Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation, her impromptu photo-shoots led to a chance encounter with a soon-to-be senator from Massachusetts. As photography helped fashion Kennedy’s keen eye for detail and framing, she developed a fondness for the craft itself, attesting that she loved ‘ferreting out people’s secrets and exploring how a photo—an exterior exposure—can reveal their interior.’ Synonymous with style and grace, Kennedy’s imprint on modern beauty remains unrivaled amongst first ladies, with this camera lens existing as a unique extension of one of Kennedy’s foremost passions. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | JOHN F. KENNEDY


52. John F. Kennedy 1953 Original Photo by Ollie Atkins Starting Bid $200

53. John and Robert Original Oversized Photo by Jacques Lowe Starting Bid $200

54. John F. Kennedy: Kohei Hanami Signed First Day Cover Starting Bid $200

55. Jacqueline Kennedy 1962 Original Photo of Trip to India by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

56. Jacqueline Kennedy 1962 Original Photo of Trip to India by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

57. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo at Berlin Wall by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

58. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo at Berlin Wall by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

59. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo at Checkpoint Charlie by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

60. Jacqueline Kennedy 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

61. John and Caroline Kennedy 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

62. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo in Rome by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

63. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo with Mariner 2 Personnel by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

64. John F. Kennedy 1963 Original Photo with Mariner 2 Personnel by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

65. John F. Kennedy and Ernie Davis Original Photo Starting Bid $200

66. John F. Kennedy and King Saud 1962 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

67. John F. Kennedy and Son 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 27


68. John F. Kennedy and Son 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

69. John F. Kennedy and Son Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

70. Kennedy Family 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

71. John F. Kennedy Inauguration Package Starting Bid $200

72. John F. Kennedy Original Photo by James Atherton Starting Bid $200

73. Jacqueline Kennedy Personal Bookplate Starting Bid $200

74. John F. Kennedy Personal Bookplate Starting Bid $200

75. John F. Kennedy, Jr. 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

76. John F. Kennedy, Jr. 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

77. Clint Hill and Dr. Robert McClelland Signed Photo Starting Bid $200

78. Clint Hill and James Leavelle Signed Newspapers Starting Bid $200

79. Clint Hill Group of (5) Signed Items Starting Bid $200

80. Clint Hill Group of (6) Signed Photos Starting Bid $200

81. John F. Kennedy Assassination Group of (7) Signed Items Starting Bid $200

82. John F. Kennedy November 22, 1963 Original Photo by Cecil Stoughton Starting Bid $200

83. John F. Kennedy Texas Welcome Dinner Invitation and Ticket Starting Bid $200

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84. James Leavelle Handwritten Statement and Signature Starting Bid $200

85. Robert F. Kennedy Signed Mourning Card Starting Bid $200

86. Robert F. Kennedy Signed Sympathy Card Starting Bid $200

87. Ethel Kennedy Autograph Letter Signed Starting Bid $200

88. Kennedy Family Stationery Starting Bid $200

89. Rose Kennedy Group of (3) Signed Items Starting Bid $200

90. Ethel Kennedy Group of (4) Signed Items Starting Bid $200

91. Rose Kennedy Pair of Autograph Letters Signed Starting Bid $200

92. Joseph P. and Rose Kennedy Pair of Typed Letters Signed Starting Bid $200

93. Robert F. Kennedy Signature Starting Bid $200

94. Robert F. Kennedy Signature Starting Bid $200

95. Robert and Ethel Kennedy Signatures Starting Bid $200

96. Robert F. Kennedy Signed Magazine Cover Starting Bid $200

97. Robert F. Kennedy Signed Photo Starting Bid $200

98. Ted Kennedy Signed Photo and Typed Letter Signed Starting Bid $200

99. Robert F. Kennedy Typed Letter Signed Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 29


presidents and first ladies Civil War–era lithograph celebrating “Washington as a Freemason” 100. George Washington. Interesting color 18 x 23 lithograph entitled “Washington as a Freemason,” published by Strobridge & Co. Lithographers of Cincinnati in 1867, portraying a full-length portrait of George Washington wearing a Masonic apron decorated with symbols of the secret fraternal organization: the All-Seeing Eye, the Compass, and the Ruler. Washington holds a trowel and a gavel, both attributes of his leadership within the society. Washington’s attributed statement, “The grand object of Masonry is to promote the happines[s] of the Human Race,” appears on a scroll unfurled beside him. Below his portrait are the important dates of his Masonic tenure: “Initiated November 4th 1752, in Fredericksburg Lodge No. 4 Virginia, Passed, March 3d 1753 Raised August 4th 1753.” The borders are colorfully decorated with symbolic vignettes, and a prose poem celebrating Washington’s contributions to his nation appears at the bottom. In very good to fine condition, with light toning and foxing. Starting Bid $200

1803 land grant issued by Jefferson and Madison for “military service performed” 101. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Partly-

printed vellum DS, signed “Th: Jefferson” as president and “James Madison” as secretary of state, one page, 12 x 14.75, January 14, 1803. A grant for a 400-acre parcel of land, issued to Duncan McArthur under the provisions of “An Act to enable the Officers and Soldiers of the Virginia Line on Continental Establishment.” Signed at the conclusion by Jefferson and countersigned by Madison. The white paper seal affixed to the lower left remains intact. Impressively and archivally suede-matted and framed with engraved plates and portraits to an overall size of 54.5 x 34.5. In very good to fine condition, with some wrinkling and staining, and both signatures a bit light but fully legible. Starting Bid $500

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May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES


102. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams. Printed

broadside document, one page both sides, 7.75 x 12, June 27 and July 8, 1797. Broadside publishing two acts passed by the Fifth Congress. The first, entitled “An Act in addition to an act, intitled, ‘An act concerning the registering and recording of ships and vessels,” stipulates that seized American vessels may not receive new registrations, and features the printed names of Vice President Thomas Jefferson and President John Adams. The second, “An Act laying an additional duty on Salt imported into the United States, and for other purposes,” concerns the increase of a tax on salt, and bears the printed signature of President John Adams. Inlaid into a larger sheet and in very good to fine condition, with repairs on the reverse to splitting along folds. Starting Bid $200

103. James Madison. Partly-printed

vellum DS as president, one page, 10 x 15, April 6, 1811. Scallop-topped ship’s pass issued for the “Schooner Augusta of New York, Gurdon Kimball, master or commander…mounted with no guns, navigated with Seven men, To Pass with her Company, Passengers, Goods and Merchandize without any hinderance, seizure or molestation, the said Schooner appearing by good testimony to belong to one or more of the Citizens of the United States.” Signed at the conclusion by President Madison, and countersigned by Secretary of State Robert Smith. White paper seal remains affixed to lower left corner. Matted and framed to an overall size of 16 x 21.25. In very good to fine condition, with overall wrinkling, and all of the handwriting, including Madison’s signature, light but legible. Starting Bid $200

104. John Quincy Adams. LS, one page, 7.75 x 9.75, June

1, 1824. Addressed from the Department of State, transmitting to John McLean his commission as US Postmaster General, in full: “The President by and with the advice and Consent of the Senate, having appointed you Postmaster General of the United States [has] the honour of enclosing herewith your Commission, of which you will [be pleased] to acknowledge the receipt.” In very good condition, with overall creasing and wrinkling, and complete backing to reinforce splitting along folds and areas of paper loss. McLean was a prominent jurist and politician who served in the United States Congress, as US Postmaster General, and as a justice of the Ohio and US Supreme Courts. Given that McLean began serving as Postmaster General on June 26, 1823, and this letter is dated June 1824, it is likely that, at this time, postal commissions were renewed on an annual basis. Starting Bid $200

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Amidst the Civil War, President Lincoln calls on loyal citizens to implore the “Supreme Ruler of the World, not to destroy us as a people” 105. Abraham Lincoln. Scarce broadside of a proclamation issued by Governor John A. Andrew of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on July 28, 1864, 18 x 27.75, recognizing President Abraham Lincoln’s proclamation of July 7th for “a Day of Humiliation and Prayer” to be held on August 4, 1864. Andrews orders that Lincoln’s proclamation be published and promulgated to the citizens of Massachusetts, and notes: “I especially invoke the attention of all ministers of the Gospel, as well as of all the good people of Massachusetts, in order that the day thus devoted as a National Sabbath to the special services and duties of penitence, prayer, and the worship of God, may be duly observed throughout our Commonwealth.” President Lincoln’s proclamation, issued amidst horrifying losses on both sides of the Civil War, is published below, asking “all loyal and law-abiding people, to convene at their usual places of worship, or wherever they may be, to confess and to repent of their manifold sins; to implore the compassion and forgiveness of the Almighty, that, if consistent with His will, the existing rebellion may be speedily suppressed, and the supremacy of the Constitution and the laws of the United States may be established throughout all the States; to implore Him, as the Supreme Ruler of the World, not to destroy us as a people, nor suffer us to be destroyed by the hostility or connivance of other nations, or by obstinate adhesion to our own counsels, which may be in conflict with His eternal purposes, and to implore Him to enlighten the mind of the nation to know and to do His will, humbly believing that it is in accordance with His will that our place should be maintained as a united people among the family of nations.” In very good to fine condition, with professional repairs to splitting along folds, and a light block of toning from prior display. Starting Bid $200

“President Johnson’s Emancipation Proclamation”—the pardon of all Confederates 106. Andrew Johnson. Rare printed broadside from the Mobile Daily

News, one page, 9 x 11, dated June 4, 1865, announcing “President Johnson’s Emancipation Proclamation” of May 29th, granting a “Pardon to all Confederates below the rank of Colonel or Lieutenant in the Navy.” The introduction reads, in part: “We are enabled to lay before the readers of the News one of the most important documents which has emanated from the Presidential pen during the past four years…It is a Proclamation or Manifesto from the Great Head of a Great Nation, and is to be spoken of, treated and respected as such by every man, woman and child, whatever his or her own private views may be.” So that “peace, order and freedom may be established,” President Andrew Johnson grants “pardon to all persons who have, directly or indirectly, participated in the existing rebellion,” except for those who served in the Confederate government, those who left judicial stations to aid the rebellion, officers above the rank of colonel in the Confederate Army and lieutenant in the Confederate Navy, and those who left seats of Congress to aid the rebellion. In very good condition, with light toning and staining, and old repairs on the reverse to intersecting folds. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES


President Grant, his cabinet, and fellow Civil War heroes Sherman and Porter 107. U. S. Grant and Cabinet. Bold ink signatures of

the president and his cabinet on two sets of 7.75 x 9.75 adjoining sheets, including: President U. S. Grant, Vice President Schuyler Colfax, Speaker of the House John G. Blaine, Secretary of State Hamilton Fish, Secretary of the Treasury George S. Boutwell, Secretary of War William Belknap, Secretary of the Navy George M. Robeson, Postmaster General John A. J. Creswell, Attorney General Ebenezer R. Hoar, Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox, Jr., General William T. Sherman, and Vice Admiral David D. Porter. In fine condition. An interesting and unusual combination of large signatures, highlighted by heroes of the Civil War in Grant, Sherman, and Porter. Starting Bid $200

Recalling the “impeachment of Andrew Johnson” in a letter on “the Credit Mobilier matter” 108. James A. Garfield. ALS signed “J. A. Garfield,” three pages on two adjoining sheets, 5 x 7.75, May 2, 1873. Letter to family friend Dr. John Peter Robison, in part: “I am on my way to Washington—where I shall send to press, as soon as I can a review of the Credit Mobilier matter. If you can get time to write me a brief letter repeating what we talked in May 1868 I shall be glad to have you do so. The points of what you told me, as I remember them, are these—That you spent some days as my guest, in Washington, during the trial of the impeachment of Andrew Johnson—and that while there I told you that Mr. Ames had offered me a chance to invest a small am’t in a company that was to operate in land & building along the Pacific Rail Road. That I asked you what you thought of it as a business proposition, that I was not determined what I would do about it & suggested to you to talk with Ames & form your own judgment—and perhaps you might think well enough of it to advance the money, and buy some of the stock on joint account. But you did not think well of the proposition as a business enterprise—and did not talk to Mr. Ames on the subject. If this is substantially correct & you would write to me soon it will help me materially.” He adds a postscript, signed “J.A.G.,” in full: “Please address me at 1227 I St. N.W. Washington.” In fine condition. At this time, Garfield was embroiled in the famed ‘Credit Mobilier Scandal’—the greatest political “storm” of the Gilded Age. In 1867, during the construction of the first transcontinental railroad, Congressman Oakes Ames had distributed cash bribes and discounted shares of Credit Mobilier stock to other congressmen in exchange for votes and actions favorable to the Union Pacific Railroad. When this corruption was revealed to the public in 1872, Garfield was among the politicians implicated in accepting stock. Although he was never exactly exonerated from the claims, and Democrats attacked him with talk of the scandal during his run for president in 1880, the Credit Mobilier crisis ultimately had little effect on Garfield’s political career. Starting Bid $200

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109. Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison. Leather-bound autograph album, 7 x 4.25, signed inside on separate pages in black ink by two American presidents, “Grover Cleveland, March 24, 1887” and “Benj. Harrison, Dec. 20, 1889.” The album also features signatures from seven members of the Cleveland cabinet—Secretary of State Thomas F. Bayard, Secretary of the Treasury Charles S. Fairchild, Secretary of War William C. Endicott, Secretary of the Navy William C. Whitney, Secretary of the Interior William F. Vilas, Attorney General Augustus H. Garland, and Secretary of the Interior Lucius Q. C. Lamar—and eight members of the Harrison cabinet—Secretary of State James G. Blaine, Secretary of the Treasury William Windom, Secretary of War Redfield Proctor, Attorney General William H. H. Miller, Postmaster General John Wanamaker, Secretary of the Navy Benjamin F. Tracy, Secretary of the Interior John W. Noble, and Secretary of Agriculture Jeremiah M. Rusk. The album also includes a signature from Andrew G. Curtin, the Civil War Governor of Pennsylvania, a US Congressman, and the US Ambassador to Russia. In fine condition. An impressive assemblage of America’s foremost political minds of the late 19th century. Starting Bid $200

110. Theodore Roosevelt. Vintage sepia matte-finish

7.75 x 11 portrait of President Theodore Roosevelt by the M. P. Rice Studio of Washington, D.C., affixed to the original 11.5 x 15.75 mount, signed and inscribed on the mount as president in fountain pen, “To Hon. J. J. Davenport, ex–Republican Mayor of Kansas City, Mo., from Theodore Roosevelt, White House, June 1st 1902.” In very good to fine condition, with two vertical creases to the image, toning from prior display, and a few pencil notations to the mount. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES

111. Theodore Roosevelt. Partly-printed DS as president, one page, 16 x 19.5, March 10, 1907. President Roosevelt appoints Edgar G. Oberlin as “Ensign in the Navy.” Signed at the conclusion by President Roosevelt and countersigned by Secretary of the Navy Victor H. Metcalf. The blue seal affixed to the lower left remains fully intact. In fine condition, with light creasing to the top, and a very tiny tear to the left edge. Starting Bid $200


113. Franklin D. Roosevelt.

112. William H. Taft. ALS as president, signed “Wm. H. Taft,” two pages, 5.25 x 6.75, White House letterhead, no date. Letter to his personal secretary Charles D. Hilles, in full: “This will introduce to Rev. John Wesley Hill D. D. Pastor Metropolitan Temple M. E. Church N. Y. City. He is a warm political and personal friend of mine and I want you to know each other. He is a great preacher & speaker. He reached N. Y. from Ohio as others have done. Give him as much time as you have.” In fine condition, with intersecting folds and small pieces of archival mounting tape on the reverse. Handwritten letters by Taft as president remain uncommon. Starting Bid $200

Wonderful vintage matte-finish 10.5 x 13.5 portrait of Roosevelt by the Pach Brothers Studio of New York, signed and inscribed on the original studio mount in fountain pen, “For Gordon S. P. Kleeberg from his old friend, Franklin D. Roosevelt.” The studio has signed both the photograph and the mount. Matted and framed to an overall size of 16.5 x 21.25. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

FDR in the midst of acquiring Warm Springs 114. Franklin D. Roosevelt. ALS signed “FDR,” one page

both sides, 8.5 x 11, Roosevelt & O’Connor letterhead, stamp dated July 1, 1926. Letter to his friend and partner, Basil O’Connor, regarding $2,500 in escrow that FDR claims is his, but which Charles Peabody believes belongs to their family. In part: “Yes, you’re right about the $2,500. You remember when we were negotiating our contract early in April I insisted I was buying all the assets of the G. W. S. Corporation [Georgia Warm Springs Corporation] & that the corporation had deposited $2,500 in escrow in the Bank at W[arm] S[prings] to go toward paying for the lake property owned by Mr. Williams, who was seeking to clear his title. Chas. Peabody, thought the money in the bank was his Uncles, but G.F.P. said it was the Corporations & the bank & Mr. Williams also insist it was the corporation’s money & that title was to be given to the corporation. I, if you remember, only finally signed the contract with the Peabody’s on the definite understanding that Mr. George Foster Peabody would pass on this $2,500. It certainly belongs to me & I want now to take title to the Williams land.” Initialed twice by Basil O’Connor at the top of the letter. In fine condition, with two file holes to the left edge. In 1924, FDR received a letter from George Foster Peabody, informing him about a young polio sufferer who seemed to have recovered his ability to walk by swimming in the buoyant waters of the Georgia. In April 1926, Roosevelt paid more than $200,000 for the Merriweather Inn, which included cottages, pools, and 1,200 acres of undeveloped land, and later acquired an additional 1,750 acres. After acquiring the necessary land, the future president established the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation, later renamed the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, with O’Connor and Wall Street banker Peabody among his financial backers. This remarkable letter represents the building blocks of Roosevelt’s center for the hydrotherapeutic treatment of polio victims and the not-for-profit foundation devoted to this work. Starting Bid $200

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Truman thanks the head of the Manhattan Project 115. Harry S. Truman.

TLS, one page, 7.25 x 10.5, personal letterhead, April 18, 1962. Letter to General Leslie R. Groves, in full: “Thank you very much for the advance copy of your book Now It Can Be Told. I am looking forward to reading this book with the greatest interest and more than appreciate your thoughtfulness in sending it to me. I am also deeply grateful for the warm and friendly inscription which you added on the flyleaf.” In fine condition. Accompanied by a later printing of Now It Can Be Told. Groves was a career Army officer (1896–1970) who headed the Manhattan Project and oversaw the construction of the Pentagon. Starting Bid $200

116. Harry S. Truman and Cabinet. Vin-

tage glossy 10 x 8 photo of President Truman and his cabinet by Harris & Ewing, signed in fountain pen by Harry S. Truman, Maurice J. Tobin, Charles F. Brannan, Jesse M. Donaldson, Louis A. Johnson, Oscar L. Chapman, Dean Acheson, John W. Snyder, J. Howard McGrath, and Charles Sawyer. Also signed by Albert W. Barney. Reverse bears a Harris & Ewing ink stamp and handwritten collector’s notation indicating that the autographs were obtained by Secretary of Labor Maurice J. Tobin in 1950. In very good condition, with overall creasing (including a shatter-pattern area of creasing to the lower center), a fleck of emulsion loss on Chapman’s nose, a small area of toning from old tape on the reverse, and some fading to a few of the signatures. Starting Bid $200

Used by LBJ to sign the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act 117. Lyndon B. Johnson. Historic fountain pen used by President Lyndon B. Johnson to sign the ‘Act to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act, and for other purposes’ (H. R. 2580). The official ‘bill signer’ Eversharp pen measures 5.25˝ long and features a navy blue plastic barrel bearing a gold facsimile signature with presidential seal and a silver-tone cap section. Includes the original presentation box with presidential seal and facsimile signature of President Johnson, as well as a typed caption affirming that the pen was “used by the President, October 3, 1965, in signing H. R. 2580.” The steel nib is not included. In fine condition. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, also known as the Hart–Celler Act, abolished the quota system based on national origins that had been American immigration policy since the 1920s. The 1965 Act marked a change from past US policy which had discriminated against non-northern Europeans. In removing racial and national barriers the Act would significantly alter the demographic mix in America. Accompanied by an official White House photo of President and Lady Bird Johnson meeting with Washington Congressman Lloyd Meeds and his wife, Barbara, affixed to the original 11 x 12.5 mount, which has been secretarially signed and inscribed. The pen is also accompanied by a letter of provenance from the daughter of Meeds, which reads: “My Father, Lloyd Meeds, was elected to the U.S. Congress in November of 1964, and represented the 2nd District of Washington State for 7 terms. While in Congress, he served on the House Rules Committee, the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, and the House Committee on Education and Labor. He was concerned about Native American rights, education and preserving National land. The Snow Lake Trail in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area was dedicated to him in 2007. [The referenced] picture was taken at the White House in 1965, during his first year in Congress.” Also includes an official presidential invitation to the White House for March 9, 1965, in its original White House envelope addressed to “Hon. and Mrs. Lloyd Meeds, House of Representatives.” Starting Bid $300 36 |

May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES


Nixon to his VP—“Your lecture on courtesy and democracy really warmed my heart” 118. Richard Nixon. TLS as president signed “RN,” one page, 6.75 x 8.75, White

House letterhead, October 27, 1972. Letter to “Ted,” Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, in full: “We have seen some interesting headlines during this campaign, but I must admit that the news report of your lecture on courtesy and democracy really warmed my heart. Everyone who has ever faced a similar situation knows he must make a decision whether or not to respond. You responded with characteristic insight—and we are all better for it. I am sure you impressed your audience!” In fine condition. Accompanied by the original transmittal envelope. Originates from the personal estate of Spiro Agnew. Written 11 days before the 1972 presidential election, Nixon must be referring to Agnew’s response to hecklers at a Syracuse rally a few days earlier. When interrupted by some protesters, he digressed from his prepared speech and admonished the hecklers, ‘I don’t think those people over there deserve to be part of the American system. There is such a thing as civility and courtesy and restraint and an ability to open your ears to another point of view…I submit to you, ladies and gentleman, that it’s very difficult for you to hear or learn anything when your mouth is constantly open.’ Starting Bid $200

“My finger is coming along fine, in fact I’ll be playing golf in 3 or 4 days”

119. Ronald Reagan. ALS signed “Dutch,” one page, 6.25 x 4.25, personal letterhead, May 25, 1990. Letter to his longtime friend “Hup,” Lydia Hupfer McArthur. In full: “My finger is coming along fine, in fact I’ll be playing golf in 3 or 4 days. Only thing in doubt is whether I’ll lose the nail and yes it’s a finger on the left hand. I’m glad to hear your knee is alright but sorry to hear about Dottie she’ll be in my prayers as you are. All my love to you Hup.” In very fine condition. Lydia Hupfer ‘Hup’ MacArthur was the widow of Pete MacArthur, program director of WOC in Davenport, Iowa. In 1932, MacArthur had given a then 21 year-old Reagan his first job as a sports announcer. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from PSA/DNA. Starting Bid $200

120. Ronald Reagan. Gorgeous Fitz

and Floyd small china plate from the Reagan White House, measuring 6.5˝ in diameter, with attractive gold borders to white canvas, red frame, and wide deep blue rim, featuring a golden Great Seal of the United States on the rim. The bottom of the plate is marked, “White House Service by Robert C. Floyd, Fritz and Floyd, Inc., Fine China, 1983.” In fine condition. White House china pieces are among the most difficult presidential items to obtain. Starting Bid $200

121. Ronald Reagan. Beautiful Fitz

and Floyd china bowl from the Reagan White House, measuring 5˝ in diameter and 2.75˝ tall, with attractive gold borders to white canvas, red frame, and deep blue rim, with a golden Great Seal of the United States in the center. The bottom of the plate is marked, “White House Service by Robert C. Floyd, Fritz and Floyd, Inc., Fine China, 1983.” In fine condition. White House china pieces are among the most difficult presidential items to obtain. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 37


122. Ronald Reagan.

Stunning Fitz and Floyd china saucer from the Reagan White House, measuring 7˝ in diameter, with attractive gold borders to white canvas, red frame, and deep blue rim. The bottom of the plate is marked, “White House Service by Robert C. Floyd, Fritz and Floyd, Inc., Fine China, 1983.” In fine condition. White House china pieces are among the most difficult presidential items to obtain. Starting Bid $200

On the death of his daughter: “As I read about Robin the tears literally flowed. You understood” 123. George Bush. ALS as

president signed “George Bush,” one page on a 6.25 x 4.25 presidential stationery card, May 16, 1991. Letter to Pulitzer Prize– winning journalist Richard Ben Cramer, about his article ‘How He Got Here.’ In full: “Yesterday I read Esquire. As I read about Robin the tears literally flowed. You understood. Thank you for your compassionate treatment of our still beloved 4 year old.” In very fine condition. A large section of Cramer’s piece was dedicated to George and Barbara Bush’s daughter, Pauline Robinson ‘Robin’ Bush, who died of leukemia as a young child. Cramer observed how the tragedy affected both Bush parents: ‘Barbara was lost in her grief. It was only George who kept her moving. After Robin’s death, he was released, to act, to keep moving. He knew so well how to do that. And he would not let his wife sink into her mourning. They had to go on, he told her. But for a while, she did not know how. He was like a man holding onto her at the cliff’s edge: They had to keep moving, to live…there were the boys…there was him! There was their life, still, to live!…In later years, she always gave him credit for saving her, for saving them. Somewhere, she learned a statistic: Two thirds of the couples who lose a child, as they had, end up divorced from the strain and the loss, the guilt and blame…but not George and Barbara Bush, they were stronger, and she always blessed him for that.’ Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES

Official vice presidential flag for Bush’s limousine

124. George Bush. Official

vice presidential limousine flag associated with Vice President George Bush’s visits to the midwest during his 1988 presidential campaign, measuring 28 x 20, featuring the seal of the vice president screened against a white nylon field, with four navy blue stars in the corners, and navy blue fringe around the edges. Sewn inside the hoist are two white leather tabs for attachment to the display pole on the limousine. This flag was manufactured by Annin & Company under government contract #8345-00245-3628, and is from a batch made exclusively for use by the Secret Service for the vice presidential limousine. In very fine condition. Accompanied by a handwritten letter of provenance from a staff person to the Governor of Kansas during that time period, in part: “This vice presidential flag is associated with Vice President George H. W. Bush visits to midwest states during his presidential campaign in 1988. As staff to the governor of Kansas during this time, I helped with advance work to Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. The governor of Kansas was also chair of the Republican Governors Association. I also helped with Bush visits to the midwest when he was president. This flag was given to me by Secret Service Agent Rudy Pena in 1988 while preparing for Bush’s campaign visit to Springfield, MO.” Starting Bid $200

125. Five First Ladies. Glossy 8

x 10 photo of four former first ladies walking together during the opening ceremony of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley on November 4, 1991, signed in the lower border in blue and black felt tip, “Barbara Bush,” “Nancy Reagan,” “Rosalynn Carter,” “Betty Ford,” and “Hillary Rodham Clinton.” In fine condition, with somewhat grainy image quality. Starting Bid $200


Bush’s personal USS Lincoln deck chair from his ‘Mission Accomplished’ speech 126. George W. Bush. Black canvas deck chair used by President George W. Bush while aboard the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln during his ‘Mission Accomplished’ visit on May 1, 2003. The collapsible chair measures 38˝ x 33˝ x 19˝ unfolded, with backing embroidered “Commander–in–Chief” with upper presidential seal in gold stitching, and end of adjustable right armrest featuring a beverage holder. Includes the original black vinyl storage bag with embroidered text: “USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72.” In fine condition, with expected surface wear and a tear to upper left ear of backing. Accompanied by a copy of an e-mail from the chair’s former owner, Bush’s speechwriter Stan Whitlock, which reads, in part: “In late April of 2003, during the Iraq War, I was part of the advance team on the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln where George W. Bush famously landed to give his historic May 1, 2003 ‘Mission Accomplished’ speech. The black folding chair, in its matching carrying bag, embroidered with the Presidential Seal and ‘Commander-in-Chief’ designation was President Bush’s personal chair while aboard the Abraham Lincoln. It was presented to me by a Kendall Card, then Captain of the Lincoln, shortly after this important event in American history.” President Bush visited the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln anchored outside of San Diego after its return from a 10-month-long deployment. While aboard he delivered his notorious ‘Mission Accomplished’ speech—a name referring to a banner decorating the upper decks of the aircraft carrier—which effectively announced the end of the military phase in Iraq. Starting Bid $200

Obama hits the links at the Fort Belvoir Golf Club 127. Barack Obama. President Barack Obama’s

tri-fold score card from the Woodlawn Golf Course at Fort Belvoir Golf Club in Virginia, measuring 12 x 6, no date, filled out entirely by the president, who signs his surname in the player field, “Obama,” and tracks the score for his three playing partners— “Eric,” “Marv,” and “Mel”—over 16 played holes. In fine condition, with intersecting folds. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from Samuel Sutton, the personal valet to President Obama, in full: “I, Samuel Sutton, worked in the White House as President Barack Obama’s personal valet. Prior to working in the Obama Administration, I worked in the White House for George W. Bush. In these capacities, I was given certain souvenirs which I have retained until this day. Among these souvenirs is the item photographed below, a brief description of which is below: A golf score card, completely written by Barack Obama including his signature as a player ‘Obama.’” President Barack Obama’s silky smooth set-shot and hardwood pedigree may align him more closely with the sport of basketball, but there’s no denying the former executive-in-chief’s fondness for the game of golf. Obama continued the longstanding tradition of presidential golfers by playing a total of 306 rounds while in office, more than both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, but well shy of Dwight D. Eisenhower and Woodrow Wilson, who respectively golfed 800 and 1,200 rounds during their administrations. A fantastic keepsake neatly filled out by the presidential scorekeeper. Starting Bid $200

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128. George W. Bush Starting Bid $200

132. George W. Bush Starting Bid $200

129. George Bush Starting Bid $200

133. George W. Bush Starting Bid $200

134. Jimmy Carter Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

137. Bill Clinton

136. Grover Cleveland

139. Calvin Coolidge

130. George Bush

140. Dwight D. Eisenhower

Starting Bid $200

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131. George and Barbara Bush Starting Bid $200

135. Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Starting Bid $200

138. Bill Clinton Starting Bid $200

141. Dwight D. Eisenhower

Starting Bid $200


144. U. S. Grant

Starting Bid $200

143. Dwight D. Eisenhower

Starting Bid $200

146. Herbert Hoover

147. Herbert Hoover Starting Bid $200

148. Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson

149. Abraham Lincoln

150. Mary Todd Lincoln

151. Abraham Lincoln: WIlliam Herndon

152. Abraham Lincoln: Stephen Logan

153. Abraham Lincoln: Frederick H. Meserve

154. [Abraham Lincoln]

155. Richard Nixon

156. Richard Nixon

157. Richard Nixon

142. Dwight D. Eisenhower

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

145. Rutherford B. Hayes Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 41


158. Richard Nixon Starting Bid $200

159. Richard Nixon Starting Bid $200

162. Nancy Reagan

160. Richard Nixon Starting Bid $200

163. Ronald Reagan

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

161. Richard and Pat Nixon Starting Bid $200

164. Ronald Reagan Starting Bid $200

165. Ronald Reagan

166. Ronald Reagan

167. Ronald Reagan

168. Ronald Reagan

169. Ronald Reagan

170. Ronald Reagan

171. Ronald and Nancy Reagan

172. Franklin D. Roosevelt

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

42 | May 8, 2019 | PRESIDENTS AND FIRST LADIES

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


173. Theodore Roosevelt

174. William H. Taft

175. William H. Taft

176. Harry S. Truman

177. Harry S. Truman

178. Harry S. Truman

179. Harry S. Truman

180. Harry S. Truman and Adlai Stevenson

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

181. Harry S. Truman and Averill Harriman

182. Harry S. Truman and Carlos Romulo

183. Truman, Johnson, and Nixon

184. [Harry S. Truman]

185. Donald Trump

186. Donald Trump

187. White House Bricks

188. White House Christmas Cards

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 43


notables Declaration of Independence Correspondence on the Louisiana Purchase, by its chief negotiator: “The United States were in the quiet possession of New Orleans on 20th Oct’r” 189. Robert R. Livingston. Lawyer, politician, and diplomat from New York (1746–1813) known as ‘The Chancellor,’ who was one of the five original drafters of the Declaration of Independence. He later served as US minister to France, negotiating the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. ALS signed “Rob’t R. Livingston,” one page, 7.5 x 9.5, March 18, 1804. Letter to the “Minister for External Relations,” in part: “I have the honor to transmit you the proclamation of Gov’r Claiborne, by which you will see that the United States were in the quiet possession of New Orleans on 20th Oct’r.” In fine condition, with two small mounting remnants to each horizontal edge. The Louisiana Purchase Treaty was signed on April 30, 1803, by Robert R. Livingston, James Monroe, and Francois Barbe-Marbois at the Hotel Tubeuf in Paris. William C. C. Claiborne supervised the transfer of the territory to US control, and served as governor of the Territory of Orleans from December 20, 1803 to April 30, 1812. A superb and historic piece of correspondence about the earliest days of one of America’s most colorful modern cities. Starting Bid $200

American Politicians and Leaders 190. Jacob Broom. American businessman and politician (1752–1810)

and signer of the US Constitution as a Delaware delegate. Very rare ALS signed “Jaco: Broom,” one page, 8 x 8.75, October 11, 1783. Letter to Thomas Rodney, the brother of Declaration signer Caesar Rodney, in part: “Above is a State of the acc’t Jacob Fussell against you (provided you…the Lot) & receiver…agreeable to Contract. Mr. Fussell is very much displeased that he should be so much disappointed & has desired me to write to you & the bearer Wm. Stow, to inform you that unless he is paid the balance with Interest within thirty days after date hereof, he will have the Lot sold at Public Sale in order to satisfy his demand—This I shall be under the necessity of doing as I cannot any longer stand between him and you.” In very good condition, with trimmed edges, and professional repairs to areas of paper loss and separations along folds. This letter was part of a larger document, of which a copy of the original is included. Also included is the filing folder from prior owner Charles Forbes, who originally purchased the letter in 1949. Starting Bid $300

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May 8, 2019 | NOTABLES


Handsome 1836 “Texian Loan” to support the Revolution 191. Texas: Stephen F. Austin. Partly-printed DS, signed “S. F. Austin,” one page, 7.75 x 8.75, January 11, 1836. Ornate financial document headed “Texian Loan,” in part: “Received of Thos. D. Carneal Thirty-two Dollars, the First Installment on a Loan of Three Hundred and Twenty Dollars, made by him this day to the Government of Texas for Five Years.” Boldly signed at the conclusion by Austin and countersigned by two other commissioners, Branch T. Archer and William H. Wharton. Attractively double-matted and framed with a portrait of Austin to an overall size of 20 x 16. In fine condition, with expected clipped cancellation to the center. Austin’s provisional government issued these certificates to raise money to finance the ongoing Texas Revolution. January 11, 1863, is the earliest known date for these Texian Loan documents, coming just six weeks before the infamous Battle of the Alamo. The recipient of this certificate, Thomas D. Carneal, was one of the primary subscribers. These ‘loans’ were essentially land purchase contracts redeemable at fifty cents per acre, a cheap price designed to attract large investments. As a document representing the Revolution and foundational stages of the state’s government, this is of the utmost desirability. Starting Bid $300

192. Texas: David G. Burnet. American politician (17881870) who served as interim president of the Republic of Texas in 1836. Uncommon manuscript DS, signed “David G. Burnet,” three pages on two adjoining sheets, 7.75 x 12.75, November 8, 1834. Written verdict in the case of “Heirs of R. Graves vs. James & Olivia Moore,” which reads, in part: “We the jury, after mature deliberation, come to the following conclusion from the law and facts…make this our verdict, all of the property in the first inventory appraised by L. Ramey and Amos Rawls, signed by John Huff, commissario, we consider James Moore and Olivia his wife bound for which…the monetary taken by Luke Lassier on 21st of April 1833 will show they are bound to pay the appraised value…and property not accounted for the hire of the negroes.” Signed at the conclusion by Burnet, and countersigned by 12 jury members. In very good condition, with heavy overall toning, some light stains, and multiple old repairs to fold splits, tears, and small areas of paper loss. Starting Bid $200

193. Texas: Sam Houston. Large ink signature, “Sam Houston,” on an off-white 7.5 x 6 album page, which is also signed by Texan Senator Thomas Jefferson Rusk and Indiana Senators James Whitcomb and Jesse D. Bright. Another hand has added the states of the respective signers. Double-matted and framed with a small caption plate to an overall size of 15.5 x 15.75. In fine condition, with light brushing to the huge signature. Starting Bid $200

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195. Texas: Mirabeau B. Lamar and Anson Jones. Two

194. Texas: Mirabeau B. Lamar. Leading Texas political figure during the Texas Republic era (1798–1859) who was elected as the second President of the Republic of Texas. Partly-printed vellum DS, signed “Mirabeau B. Lamar,” one page, 14.75 x 12.75, August 13, 1841. Lamar grants Harvey Tilley a plot of land containing 640 acres situated in Jefferson County. Signed at the conclusion by Lamar as Texan president. Lower portion embossed with two seals and overall writing and text crisp and clean. In fine, folded condition. Starting Bid $200

items: a partly-printed DS signed “Mirabeau B. Lamar,” one page, 16.5 x 10.75, August 25, 1840, general land office document granting Oliver Hull 10 acres of land on Galveston Island, signed at the conclusion by Lamar as president of Texas; and a DS, signed “Anson Jones,” one page, 8.5 x 10.75, December 27, 1838, a certificate of purchase in “conformity with a Law entitled ‘An Act to dispose of Galveston and other Islands in the Republic of Texas,” in relation to his purchase of 10 acres on Galveston Islands, with Jones on the reverse transferring and assigning “to Oliver Hill of the City of New York… all my right, title, and interest in and to the lot or parcel of Land,” with Jones signing below. Attached to the front of the Jones certificate is a manuscript bill of sale signed by Hull and assigning the property to his relatives for the sum of $106; also included is a land survey related to the Hull land. In overall fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Activists and Social Leaders Mandela’s sought-after ‘The Struggle Series’ 196. Nelson Mandela. Beautiful limited edition set of six small-

format lithographs entitled ‘The Struggle Series,’ numbered 132/950, each measuring 5.75 x 8.25, signed on the first lithograph in pencil, “N. Mandela.” The signed print reproduces Mandela’s handwritten description of the series, and the other prints are of sketches done by Mandela that chronicle his people’s struggle; all six also feature Mandela’s facsimile signature inherent to the print. The sketches are entitled ‘Struggle,’ ‘Imprisonment,’ ‘Freedom,’ ‘Unity,’ and ‘Future.’ Mandela explains: ‘These sketches are not so much about my life as they are about my own country.’ In fine to very fine condition. Accompanied by the publisher’s certificate of authenticity and the original handsome black embossed box. An absolutely stunning, scarce set signed by one of the great activist leaders of the 20th century. Starting Bid $300

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May 8, 2019 | NOTABLES


Looking toward Indian independence: “You will, I know, fully share in this freedom, only to breathe the air of freedom with your countrymen” 197. Mohandas Gandhi. Unsigned handwritten draft of a letter by Gandhi, one page, 5.25 x 6.75, no date but circa March 1946. Gandhi drafts a response on the reverse of a letter sent to him by a Western follower, George Mammen, dated March 10, 1946. In part: “Our India will have need of you. You have had your training. You will give India the benefit of that training. It would be sad only if after the trials and suffering [“of war” struck out] that our soldiers have been through, they forget the lessons of their eyes, the moment the peril is lifted. But one thing you should remember, under remunerations and national Govt, you won’t be pampered. You won’t have all those lavish privileges which a foreign Govt. bribe you with at the expense of India. India is destitute. You can serve her only by showing her destitution and poverty. Otherwise you will earn not the gratitude but the execration of your country. [Now writing at the top of the page:] You will, I know, fully share in this freedom, only to breathe the air of freedom with your countrymen.” In fine condition. Gandhi was a revered political leader and activist (1869-1948) whose efforts on behalf on Indian independence through nonviolent means made him the most influential figure in the history of modern India. After studying law in England, Gandhi spent several years in South Africa defending the rights of immigrants. Upon his return to his native country he became the leader of the Indian National Congress and embarked on a decades-long crusade for Indian independence, demonstrating and urging nonviolence and civil disobedience as the most effective means of achieving this goal. His public acts of defiance resulted in repeated incarceration and brought him to international attention. In 1947, a year after writing the present letter, he participated in the postwar negotiations that led to Indian independence; in the following year, he was assassinated by a Hindu fanatic. Starting Bid $1000

198. Florence Nightingale. ALS, three pages on two adjoining sheets, 5 x 8, 10 South Street letterhead, August 28, 1897. Letter to General George Higginson, a veteran of the Crimean War, in full: “Just as I was about to send the enclosed anent Sister Constable, I received your extremely kind note of Aug. 17, I felt much your goodness in remembering me & offering to come & see me on any ‘matter’ which I ‘desired to bring to your notice on any day next week’ that is, the week now ending. It was very kind of you. I should have answered it at once, but I was & always am under a rather severe pressure of business & ill health. If I could hope that your kind offer still holds, would it be possible for you to make an appointment to see me any day after Wednesday this next week, say at 5 or 5.30 p.m. But I think this hour is unreasonable on my part because it probably is too late for your return home. I could make it 3.30 if that would suit you better. I am obliged to cry you mercy! for I am never mistress of my own time & am a prisoner to my room. But I am most thankful for the privilege of having still so much to do. Excuse this rambling note & believe me.” In fine condition. Higginson met Nightingale in Crimea and quickly developed a great admiration for her work with the sick. Their relationship continued for many several years; in another 1897 letter to Higginson, Nightingale makes reference to the running of the Gordon Boys’ Homes which he, along with the Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, had established for ‘homeless and friendless lads.’ Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 47


Amazing archive of documents that saved Jewish lives in WWII—including two signed by Sweden’s heroic diplomat 199. Raoul Wallenberg.

Extraordinary archive of seven significant documents associated with the rescue of Hungarian Jews during World War II, including two signed by legendary humanitarian diplomat Raoul Wallenberg. Includes: a scarce two-language Schutz-Pass issued to Oscar Kallai on August 23, 1944, quickly signed by Raoul Wallenberg with an ink scribble “R” (as he commonly did on documents of this type); a twolanguage “legitimation” document certifying George Vertes as a member of the Swedish Red Cross, issued on November 4, 1944, signed in the lower right corner in fountain pen by Wallenberg, with both the “R” and the “W” legible; a two-language document confirming the application for entry clearance by Endre Peisner for the issuance of a “Schutzpass,” no date, bearing stamped signatures of Wallenberg at the conclusion of each section; a four-language document issued by the Swedish Red Cross at Budapest, issued on November 3, 1944, ordering the protection of Elena Makay; a document ordering the protection of Gabor Vadas, issued by the by the Swedish Red Cross on November 4, 1944; a rare hardcover multilingual passport booklet issued by the Swedish Red Cross to Gjorgi Karolyi on November 15, 1944; and a document signed by the Vatican’s Apostolic Papal Nuncio in Budapest, Angelo Rotta, issued on November 21, 1944, providing for the protection of Gyula Szekfu. In overall very good to fine condition. As a whole, this is an extraordinary archive that represents the tireless, heroic efforts in Hungary to outwit the Nazis and save countless lives. Starting Bid $2500

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May 8, 2019 | NOTABLES


Businessmen 200. Harley-Davidson: William H. Davidson.

201. Charles Schwab.

The son of Harley-Davidson Motor Company cofounder William A. Davidson (1905– 1992); he served as the company’s president for 29 years and raced on their behalf, winning the prestigious Jack Pine Trophy in 1929. DS, signed “Wm. H. Davidson,” one page both sides, 8.5 x 14, October 26, 1956. Dealership agreement between the Harley-Davidson Motor Company and Paul W. Haines of Northumberland, Pennsylvania, in which the latter agrees to purchase “Motorcycles, Sidecars, Servicecars, Package Trucks, Chassis” and other parts and accessories over the course of one year. Signed at the conclusion in fountain pen by William H. Davidson, Paul W. Haines, and a salesman. In fine condition, with a few light stains. Starting Bid $200

American steel magnate (18621939) whose Bethlehem Steel became the second largest steel maker in the United States, and one of the most important heavy manufacturers in the world. Vintage sepia mattefinish 6 x 9 portrait of Schwab by the famed Pirie MacDonald Studio of New York, affixed to the original 11 x 15.5 studio mount, signed and inscribed on the mount in fountain pen, “To Hugh Weir, with sincere regards, C. M. Schwab,” who adds the date to the left, “Dec. 20th 1928.” Lower right of photo bears the studio mark with reverse of mount listing various awards won by the Pirie MacDonald Studio. In very good to fine condition, with soiling and foxing to the mount, and some light silvering to the image. Starting Bid $200

Scientists and Inventors Ampere sends observations on “a new planet” 202. Andre-Marie Ampere. Influential French physicist (1775–1836) who pioneered the discovery and understanding of electromagnetism; a unit of electric current was named in his honor. ALS in French, signed “A. Ampere,” four pages on two adjoining sheets, 6.5 x 8.25, no date but circa 1802. Letter to Mr. Couppier de Viry in Lyon, containing the calculations and observations he has to identify the position of the new planet, for example: “dist. mean: 2, 7677, eccentricity: 0, 0791, inclination: 10°, 37’, 4’’.” He notes (translated): “Here is my dear friend all I know about this new planet, which does not seem to me harder than Herschell to find in the sky.” Ampere probably refers to the planet Uranus discovered in 1781 by William Herschel. He then recounts his astronomy class and his research in botany before talking about his wife, Julie Carron, whom he married in 1799: “I hope that the absence does not prevent you from thinking sometimes about who will be always your best friend, and who wishes you all the happiness possible and the time to write to him, because nothing can make him more pleasure after the letters of Julie.” In very good condition, with staining, some edge tears, and an area of paper loss affecting several lines of text; the bold signature is clean and completely unaffected by any flaws. In 1802, Ampere left Lyon where he taught mathematics, to become a professor of physics and chemistry at the Ecole Centrale de Bourg-en-Bresse. Starting Bid $300

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Fatherly advice for Samuel Bard, who would become George Washington’s personal physician 203. [Samuel Bard]. ALS signed “Jno. Bard,” three pages, 7.25 x 9, May 27, 1765. Letter to “Mr. Samuel Bard, Student in Physick at the University of Edinburgh,” written by his father John, in full: “I have received both your letters of March and April the first containing an acct of the situation you stand in in your own opinion to Miss Polly Lester I very much approve of that Delicacy you Express upon this occasion and make no doubt that the principles of candour and honour will allways Influence your conduct in life but in this Instance I think you have nothing to reproach your self with...I dare say your own observations have convinced you before this time that the marrying without affection merely for the sake of Interest is sordid, & vile. it is highly Imprudent and little short of madness for a young gentleman to precipitate himself into a married state eggd on by a barbarous & unreasonable Passion. that in many Instances is to Extravagant to be very properly called the fever of the soul. your Silence is as conclusive as if you had wrote actions speak louder than words nor do I know how you could well have framed a letter upon this Subject perhaps of all others it is the most difficult and might perhaps had a wors effect than to let in die away insensibly. on your return I would advise an Easie friendly behavior, but avoid any thing particular. I believe no occasion will offer to make Verball or particular explination necessary if it should you can with a better grace do it in the course of a conversation than by Writing. I am much obliged to you for the draft of the paper mill you sent me I wish you would acquaint your self with the whole of that business together with the Expence of carrying it on and the profits which attend it.” In very good condition, with almost complete separation (and some old tape) to the hinge, and seal-related paper loss to the integral address leaf affecting one word of text. Starting Bid $200

204. Marie François Xavier Bichat. French

anatomist and pathologist (1771–1802) known as the father of histology, who is respected as one of the greatest scientists in the area of medicine. Excessively rare untranslated manuscript DS, in French, signed “Bichat,” one page, 6.75 x 8.25, no date. In very good condition, with moderate overall foxing. Starting Bid $200

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One of Darwin’s last autographs

205. Charles Darwin. Extremely desirable ink signature, “Charles Darwin, from your well-wisher, April 15, 1882,” on an off-white 5 x 2.75 slip. In fine condition, with light show-through along the left edge from mounting traces on the reverse. Darwin would pass away just four days later on April 19, 1882. Starting Bid $500


206. Thomas Edison. Crisp

matte-finish 3.25 x 5.25 postcard photo of the pioneering inventor by E. Bieber of Hamburg, neatly signed in fountain pen, “Thos. A. Edison.” In fine condition, with some light silvering, and a tiny tear to the right edge. Starting Bid $200

207. Paul Ehrlich. German sci-

entist and pioneer of chemotherapy (1854–1915) who was co-awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine with Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov in 1908. ALS in German, signed “H. Ehrlich,” one page on a 5.5 x 3.5 portrait postcard, postmarked at Frankfurt, August 31, 1909. Ehrlich sends greetings to the British bacteriologist Henry George Plimmer, signed at the conclusion of the note and below his portrait. In very good to fine condition, with adhesive residue over the letter, and heavy edge wear. Starting Bid $200

“The general field laws are not sufficiently determined by the general principle of relativity alone”

208. Albert Einstein. Unusual handwritten manuscript fragment in German, unsigned, penned by Albert Einstein in the corner of an envelope panel addressed to him at Princeton, 10 x 4.5, postmarked June 7, 1948. In black ink, Einstein writes a draft of most of the final paragraph of his article, ‘Relativity: Essence of the Theory of Relativity,’ published in 1948 in the American People’s Encyclopedia. A translation, as it was published, has been written below in another hand: “while it leads to a well-defined theory of the gravitational field it does not determine sufficiently the theory of the total field (which includes the electromagnetic field). The reason for this is the fact that the general field laws are not sufficiently determined by the general principle of relativity alone.” In fine condition, with scattered light creasing, and a very short tear to the top edge. An important autograph in which Einstein implicitly states why he spent so many of his final years searching for a Unified Field Theory. Starting Bid $2500

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Remarkable archive of a hydrofoil innovator, featuring ten letters from Einstein

209. Albert Einstein. Extensive archive of the papers of Wsevolode Grunberg, an aeronautical engineer who developed

an important design for the hydrofoil, highlighted by eleven items signed by Albert Einstein, including one ALS, nine TLSs, and one signature (all with translations from German to English), dated from 1939 to 1948 (one undated). Along with these letters are one ALS by Elsa Einstein, two TLSs by his secretary Helen Dukas, and over 1,000 pages of Grunberg’s papers including some of his original drawings for his hydrofoil improvements, copies of his patents, a large dossier of declassified tests performed in the years immediately following WWI, photographs, correspondence, and other related documents and ephemera. Einstein’s letters primarily concern his negotiations on Grunberg’s behalf related to an inheritance, with a handful also offering introductions to people that might aid Grunberg’s engineering career—namely Dr. George W. Lewis, director of research for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), and Theodore von Karman, who conducted groundbreaking research on aerodynamics. In letters from 1939 and 1940, he discusses a friend who plans to settle in England and might help mediate the inheritance matter—however, the friend failed to move there “because of the impending war.” Returning to the subject in 1944, Einstein again references World War II: “I don’t have a clear picture of all the legal implications. After all, in the meantime, our world fell apart and it is difficult to judge a person’s financial obligations from the past.” In overall fine condition. A detailed listing is available online at RRAuction.com Starting Bid $5000 52 |

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Important handwritten letter by Einstein containing formulas for a centro-symmetric solution in the theory of general relativity 210. Albert Einstein. ALS in

German, signed “A. E.,” one page, 8.5 x 11, no date. Letter to mathematician Ernst Gabor Straus, containing three calculation formulas for a centro-symmetric solution in the theory of general relativity. In part (translated): “I have the thing calculated with centrally symmetric, and it shivers me that you must have made a miscalculation after the introduction of the specializations for the coordinate system I find without prejudice to the condition? S”=0 has the expression…” He has recalculated the centrosymmetric formula and it seems to him that Straus had made a miscalculation. He inscribes two lines of formulas, commenting: “Therefore, if I have not fallen victim to an error myself, the calculation of the centro-symmetric case must be resumed. On the basis of the notation [formula]…I’m at risk of miscalculations and not convinced that this result is correct.” However, he wants to point out this problem so that Straus does not study the problem on a possibly incorrect basis and does not digress; and, if in the centro-symmetric solution the functions remain arbitrary, they must try to change the basis. In fine condition. Ernst Gabor Straus (1922–1983), born in Munich, had fled Nazi persecution and studied mathematics in Palestine at the University of Jerusalem, then in the United States. In 1944 he became Einstein’s assistant at the Princeton Institute of Advanced Study, bringing important aid to the physicist as Straus formulated a mathematical framework for Einstein’s concepts. They co-authored three papers and brought together many of Einstein’s old publications. It was during their collaboration that a new idea was conceived in the search for a theory of the unified field, which they called ‘Complex Theory.’ The complex theory was distinguished from earlier approaches by the use of a metric tensor with complex values rather than the real tensor of general relativity. Papers were edited, rejected, and reworked before being published in 1948. An important scientific letter from Einstein containing handwritten formulas related to his search for a unified field theory. Starting Bid $2500

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Granting permission to publish a foreword in the “Spinoza Dictionary,” a guide to Einstein’s most-admired philosopher 211. Albert Einstein. TLS in German, signed “A. Einstein,” one page, 8 x 10.25, blindstamped Princeton letterhead, July 28, 1951. Letter to Dr. Dagobert D. Runes, granting him permission to use a letter he wrote as a foreword to his Spinoza Dictionary. In full (translated): “I am happy to give you my permission to use my comments about your Spinoza Dictionary in the manner you desire.” Double-matted and framed to an overall size of 14 x 16.5. In fine condition. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from JSA. Einstein was widely known as an admirer of the philosopher Baruch Spinoza, naming Spinoza as the philosopher who exerted the most influence on his world view. Although he did not believe in a personal deity, Einstein was not averse to speaking of God in a scientific context when discussing differing interpretations of quantum physics. In 1929, he said that he believed ‘in Spinoza’s God, who reveals himself in the harmony of all that exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and the doings of mankind.’ In the foreword to the book, Einstein recognized that ‘Spinoza is, among the great classical thinkers, one of the least accessible because of his rigid adherence to the geometric form of argumentation,’ and he praises Runes’s compilation of a straightforward and reliable guide for interpretation. Starting Bid $1000

“It is a curious fate to be objectified alive”— Einstein signs his biography 212. Albert Einstein. Rare signed book: Albert Einstein: A Biographical

Portrait by Anton Reiser. First edition. NY: Albert & Charles Boni, Inc., 1930. Hardcover, 6 x 9, 225 pages. Signed in German on the first free end page in black ink (roughly translated): “It is a curious fate to be objectified alive. Think with humor while reading. A. Einstein.” An ownership notation to the adjacent page indicates that the book belonged to the artistic couple Alexandre and Catherine Barjansky, with one adding a notation at the bottom of the signed page, “S.S. ‘Belgenland,’ New-York, 14/XII/30”; Einstein was in New York at this time, having arrived aboard the Belgenland three days earlier, and the ship dropped anchor in the outer harbor for several days. Autographic condition: very good to fine, with light toning, and a few small stains, to the signed page. Book condition: VG/ None, with light sunning to spine.

This book boasts several fascinating associations: Anton Reiser was the pseudonym of Rudolf Kayser, a German literary historian and husband to Albert Einstein’s stepdaughter Ilse; Catherine Barjansky once used Einstein as a subject for a tiny wax portrait-statue; Alexandre Barjansky was a virtuoso cellist, and Einstein was himself an accomplished violinist; and Einstein traveled aboard the Belgenland several times. He was on the ship in March 1933, intending to return home to Germany, when he learned the alarming news that the Nazis had ransacked his summer cottage in Caputh. At that point he decided it was too dangerous to return to his homeland. When the ship docked in Antwerp, Belgium, he immediately reported to the German consulate in Brussels, where he turned in his German passport and renounced his citizenship. Einstein returned to America in October, beginning a new life as a member of the faculty of Princeton University’s Institute for Advanced Study. Starting Bid $500 54 |

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The inventor of the Gatling gun considers a new “traversing device” 213. Richard Gatling. Manuscript DS, signed “R. J. Gatling, for the Gatling Gun Co.,” one page, 7.75 x 9.75, September 3, 1872. Statement agreeing to pay for potential use of a new Gatling Gun apparatus, in full: “I, Richard J. Gatling, inventor of the Gatling Gun, for myself and for the Gatling Gun Company, promise and agree that I will apply to the Gatling Guns, the traversing device, invented by Alfred Koerner, an engineer in Vienna, Austria—drawings of which have been handed me by Gen’l John Love of Indiana, and if such invention is adopted or used by the Gatling Gun Company for Gatling Guns, then the invention of said Koerner shall be paid for by said Gatling Gun Comp’y.” Signed boldly at the conclusion by Gatling. In fine condition. Alfred Koerner was an engineer and later the chairman of Hotchkiss and Company, a French arms manufacturer established by American gunsmith Benjamin B. Hotchkiss. An example of the company’s output was the Hotchkiss revolving cannon, the subject of an 1874 booklet by Koerner that offered manifold comparative results from firing tests between Hotchkiss and Gatling guns. Starting Bid $200

214. Edward Jenner. English physician and scientist (1749–1823) often called

the ‘father of immunology,’ who successfully tested his smallpox inoculation in 1796. Partial ALS, one page, 4.5 x 3.75, [July 30, 1812 annotated on the reverse in another hand]. The conclusion of a letter to “Mr. Drayton, St. George’s Square, Cheltenham,” in full: “should be able to manage it with a tightened string. With best wishes to you & yours, I remain yrs truly, Edw’d Jenner.” Addressed on the reverse in Jenner’s hand. In very good condition, with areas of repaired paper loss, and a block of toning from prior display. Starting Bid $200

A maxim from Metchnikoff

215. Elie Metchnikoff. Russian biologist and zoologist (1845–1916) best known for his pioneering research into the immune system, for which he was awarded the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Desirable AQS in French on an off-white 4 x 2.25 card, signed below in ink, “Elie Metchnikoff.” In full (translated): “The conviction that the aim of human life will only be reached by a very great solidarity among men will restrain actual selfishness.” In very fine condition. Starting Bid $200

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Morse replies to a competitor’s claim to “have also invented a Telegraph”— “None as yet can compete with the lightning” 216. Samuel F. B. Morse. ALS signed “Sam’l F. B. Morse,” one page, 8 x 10, March 24, 1846. Letter to Joseph Tracy in Boston, who claimed to have developed a method of using long and short pulses as a code for telegraphy independently of Morse. In part: “Yours of 18th inst. I have just received in which you say you have also invented a Telegraph, and that you intend doing nothing in relating to it ‘until I have had time to speak.’ You do not give me any clue to your plan, so that I am unable to speak. But as I am a Yankee I have the privilege of guessing, and also of guessing twice, if I guess wrong the first time. I guess then your plan is a tube filled with water, which has often been the subject of our thoughts and plannings, and which has long been discarded not because it not feasible for a certain distance but from its expense and some other inconveniences which virtually make it impracticable. Besides it is a plan calculated and thrown aside before electric telegraphs were thought of. Now if I have guessed right you are in the vocative, if wrong why is there a chance for your life. Let us have it, for if it is new and original with you, you need no patent papers to secure to you the benefits of it…I have many communications on various plans from all parts of the Country. None as yet can compete with the lightning.” The integral address leaf retains a red “U.S. Telegraph Office” seal. In very good to fine condition, with some splitting to the intersecting folds, and seal-related paper loss to the integral address leaf. Starting Bid $300

217. Samuel F. B. Morse. ALS

signed “Sam’l F. B. Morse,” one page, 5 x 8, December 30, no year. Letter to Samuel Colgate, a prominent businessman and the husband to Morse’s niece, Elizabeth Ann Morse, in full: “Please inform William when the girls will arrive at the Ferry from Orange to day so that he may have the carriage in waiting for them.” In fine condition, with one tiny smudge within the text. Starting Bid $200

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218. Robert Oppenheimer. Brilliant

American physicist (1904–1967) who directed the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and who spearheaded the Manhattan Project, leading to the development of the first atomic bomb. TLS, one page, 5.5 x 6.5, The Institute for Advanced Study letterhead, May 9, 1962. Letter to Newsweek editor Edwin Diamond, in part: “Thank you for your good note, and thank you for sending me your really excellent analysis in Newsweek. It is not clear to me that I know anything at all that will be helpful to you, but if you are willing to try, so am I.” In fine condition. Accompanied by TLSs by John Glenn and George McGovern, also addressed to Diamond. Starting Bid $200


Intellectuals Psychoanalysis and the German Youth Movement 219. Sigmund Freud. ALS in German, signed “Freud,” one page, 5.75 x 9, personal letterhead, January 22, 1933. Letter to Gilbert Perleberg of the Federation of the German Youth Movement in New York. Freud states his great interest in the explanations of Hans Moser in the ‘Rundbrief’ [circular], and is pleased to see that psychoanalysis arouses interest in this certain circle. Nevertheless Freud means to have found some mistakes in the essay, as he does not believe the problem of conscience holds a central position in his works. In fine condition, with a very short tear to the bottom edge. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope addressed in Freud’s own hand. Starting Bid $500

Religious Figures

The future pope relays a message on “indulgences” 220. Pope John Paul I. Born Albino Luciani (1912–1978), he was elected Pope on August 26, 1978, and suddenly died of a heart attack just 33 days later. TLS in Italian, signed “A. L.,” one page, 5.75 x 9, Bishop of Vittorio Veneto letterhead, October 11, 1968. Letter as bishop of Vittorio Veneto, in part (translated): “I am honored to announce that under the new ‘Handbook of Indulgences’ released just a month ago, the bishop can grant partial indulgences only to persons under their jurisdiction.” In fine condition, with a few light creases, and staple holes to the upper left corner. Starting Bid $200

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World Leaders Cohiba cigars signed by Castro during a ‘Carolina to Cuba’ trade mission

221. Fidel Castro. Wooden Cohiba Lanceros cigar box containing 25 handmade Cuban cigars, measuring 8.5 x 8.5 x 1.75,

prominently signed on the lid in black felt tip by Fidel Castro. The corner of the lid bears a “Habanos” label, and the box is stamped on the bottom, “Habanos S.A., Hecho en Cuba, Totalmente a mano, MKO DIC 03.” The box has all 25 original Cohiba Lancero cigars inside, famous as Castro’s favorite type. In fine condition, with some irregular ink adhesion due to the wooden surface. This box was signed for Lt. Governor Andre Bauer of South Carolina during a 2004 US–Cuba trade mission, and is accompanied by a letter of provenance signed by Bauer, in full: “In January 2004 the Governor of the state of South Carolina asked me to go in his stead to Cuba for a trade mission. As Lieutenant Governor, the United States government allowed travel for trade, limited to agricultural and pharmaceutical products. After a few days of negotiation, I had a meeting that was supposed to last approximately 30 minutes with Mr. Castro. However, because of heightened debate and differences of governmental perspectives, he decided to stay for over four hours. During this time he offered me a box of cigars, at which time I asked him if he would sign them. Since 2004, the cigars have remained in my possession.” During this ‘Carolina to Cuba’ trade mission, the South Carolina delegation secured a commitment from the Cuban government to purchase $10 million worth of agricultural products from the state’s farmers. This episode was widely covered in the press, and the gift of signed cigar boxes was reported at the time. The Charleston Post and Courier wrote: ‘Before Castro was whisked away to one of the waiting Mercedes, he and the delegation exchanged gifts—a crystal candelabra and cuff links with the state seal for the feisty Cuban and Cohiba cigars in Castro-autographed wooden boxes for the state officials.’ As cigars were such an integral component of Castro’s heroic revolutionary image, this signed box of desirable Cubans is a truly remarkable historical artifact. Starting Bid $1000

222. Chiang Kai-shek. Chinese politician and military leader (1887–1975) who served as the leader of the Republic of China between 1928 and 1975. Uncommon glossy 5 x 7 photo of Chiang Kai-shek seated in a relaxed pose, boldly signed in black ink in Chinese. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light creasing, and surface impressions from a notation on the reverse. Starting Bid $200

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223. Madame Chiang Kai-shek. TLS signed “With affection, Mayling Soong Chiang,” one page, 8.25 x 10.5, Office of the President, Republic of China letterhead, June 23, 1960. Letter to her former Wellesley College classmate Mildred Smith Green, in full: “Thank you for sending me a copy of the Brooklyn Wellesley Club Cook Book. I remember the ‘Upstairs’ tea room well, and note your remarks about the Wellesley Fudge Cake. I shall try out your recipe soon. President Eisenhower just left after a twenty-four hour visit to Taiwan. Never has a state guest been more enthusiastically welcomed by the whole populace. Just before his visit, President and Madame Garcia of the Philippines were here, and previous to that, the President of Vietnam. Thank you for your inquiry about my health. After the virus attack, I was stricken with paratyphoid fever. It took me a long time to recover as, being allergic to antibiotics, the doctors would not prescribe them for me, but advised to let the fever run itself out. I am still trying to catch up with the backlog of work which accumulated during my illness and the periods of state visits. Is it possible that you might be planning a trip to the Far East? If so, and you come by this way, do stop off at Taiwan. I should be delighted to see you again.” In fine condition, with a crease to right side and some wear to right edge. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope. In 1914, Mayling transferred to Wellesley College to be closer to her older brother, T. V., who was studying at Harvard. She graduated from Wellesley as one of the 33 ‘Durant Scholars’ on June 19, 1917, with a major in English literature and minor in philosophy. She was also a member of Tau Zeta Epsilon, Wellesley’s Arts and Music Society. Starting Bid $200

“I am heartily glad some one who is not a puppet is gone to the Treasury” 225. Winston Churchill.

224. Madame Chiang Kai-shek. Vintage matte-finish 4 x 6 full-length photo Madame Chiang posing outdoors, signed in fountain pen, “Mayling Soong Chiang.” Reverse bears a collector’s notation: “Taken by Mildred Smith Green at Luncheon Mayling gave for a few of her Wellesley Classmates—at her home in Riverdale, NY, 6/15/45.” In fine condition, with a crease to left side passing through her lower dress. In 1914, Mayling transferred to Wellesley College to be closer to her older brother, T. V., who was studying at Harvard. She graduated from Wellesley as one of the 33 ‘Durant Scholars’ on June 19, 1917, with a major in English literature and minor in philosophy. She was also a member of Tau Zeta Epsilon, Wellesley’s Arts and Music Society. Starting Bid $200

ALS signed “Winston S. Churchill,” two pages on two adjoining sheets, 4.75 x 6.5, Villa Kazbeck letterhead, April 14, 1903. Letter to Arthur Elliot on his appointment as Financial Secretary to the Treasury. In part: “I cannot resist writing a line of congratulation to you. I am heartily glad some one who is not a puppet is gone to the Treasury. We have sometimes been in agreement in the part, & I am not without hope that even on the Army question someday converted. May ‘Letters to a Liberal-Unionist’ will now never be written: but perhaps I shall find another peg on which to hang the ideas. Don’t pray answer this. I can guess that you are choked with work…Hamilton ailing, Ritchie ‘with a feverish cold,’ a new Financial secretary and the budget impending!” A later pencil notation at the top describes the contents of the letter. In fine condition. A fascinating and insightful letter from Churchill, written at a time of political turmoil in Great Britain. Starting Bid $300

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227. Winston Churchill.

226. Winston Churchill. Handsome matte-finish 3.5 x 5.5 half-length Rotary series postcard photo of Churchill as a young member of Parliament, signed in the lower border in ink, “Winston S. Churchill.” Reverse is addressed in another hand. In very good to fine condition, with a thin crease passing across Churchill’s chest, and light creasing to the lower left corner. Starting Bid $200

Partly-printed DS, signed “Winston S. Churchill,” one page, 8 x 12.75, June 14, 1910. Official letter of thanks on black-bordered Royal Arms stationery, addressed to the secretary of the Bilston District Provident Society, in full: “I am commanded by The king to convey to you hereby His Majesty’s Thanks for the Loyal and Dutiful Resolution of the Members of the Willenhall Branch of the Bilston District Provident Society on the occasion of the lamented death of His late Majesty King Edward the Seventh. I am to say that the expression of sympathy with Queen Alexandra has been laid before Her Majesty, who desires me to communicate to you her Thanks.” Signed at the conclusion by Churchill. In very good to fine condition, with some creasing and staining, a short tear to the top edge, and some minor ink adhesion troubles to the signature. Starting Bid $200

“The aspirations of mankind is Liberty: And to defend it, is our sacred duty”—an extraordinary quote from the Chinese revolutionary 228. Huang Xing. Chinese revolutionary leader and politician (1874–1916) who was a founder of the Kuomintang and served as the first army commander-in-chief of the Republic of China. Rare AQS in English on an off-white 5 x 8 sheet, signed and dated at the conclusion in ink, “Hwang Hsing, New York, Oct. 12th 1914.” Huang pens an appropriately patriotic quote: “The aspirations of mankind is Liberty: And to defend it, is our sacred duty.” In very good to fine condition, with a rectangular block of toning to the center. Huang penned this quote following his military exploits during the Xinhai Revolution, which toppled the Qing dynasty and ended 2,000 years of imperial rule in China. After failing in further rebellion efforts at Jiangsu in 1913, Huang fled to Japan and then went into exile in New York City in 1914. He returned to China after the death of Yuan Shikai in June 1916, but passed away from illness just four months later. Starting Bid $1000

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Ultra-rare signatures of Lenin and Trotsky from the start of the Russian Soviet Republic 229. Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky.

Amazingly rare combination of circa 1918 fountain pen signatures in French of Russian revolutionaries Vladimir Lenin, “Lenine, president du Conseil des Commissaires du Peuple,” and Leon Trotsky, “Leon Trotsky, Commissaire aux affaires etrangeres,” on a lightly-lined 4.5. x 7 off-white sheet. The upper right corner features an original contemporary pencil and crayon sketch of a guillotine by painter J. M. Brossart, the image depicting several individuals standing in a row as they face execution, signed below in ink, “Ce que nous souhaitons aux soussignés [What we wish for the undersigned]—J. M. Brossart.” The reverse bears ten ink signatures of various French fighter pilots of World War I, each of them members of the Escadrille BR 209 squadron, including Leon Ribiere. Neatly inlaid into a larger off-white sheet and in fine condition. In fine condition. The present signatures of Lenin and Trotsky were obtained shortly after the historic October Revolution, a seizure of state power instrumental in the larger Russian Revolution of 1917. It took place with an armed insurrection in Petrograd, following and capitalizing on the February Revolution of the same year, which overthrew the Tsarist autocracy. The October Revolution resulted in the power being shifted to the local Soviets in Petrograd, whom heavily supported the Bolshevik Party. After the Congress of Soviets, now the governing body, had its second session, it elected members of the Bolsheviks to key positions which immediately initiated the establishment of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, the world’s first self-proclaimed socialist state. On November 8, 1917, the Congress elected a Council of People’s Commissars, with Lenin as Chairman and Trotsky as Commissar of Foreign Affairs, the positions they have added to the present signatures. Provenance: The present signatures were removed from a notebook previously owned by Robert de Flers (1872–1927), French playwright and journalist who traveled to the Eastern front as the head of a French military mission, taking him to Romania, Moscow, and Petrograd, at which time he obtained the signatures of Lenin and Trotsky. A first hand account of Flers’ travels was written by Emmanuel Chaumé (1890–1934) and published by Firmin-Didot of Paris in 1929 under the title La Belle Aventure de Robert de Flers - Russie-Romanie (Fevrier–Mars 1918). The album was subsequently passed to his nephew, the French diplomat and pilot of World War I, Viscount Amédée de Flers. Starting Bid $5000

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“Orders have been issued to cease fire on the Egyptian lineas from 2 p.m. Cairo time today” 230. Israel War of Independence. Significant TLS from Egyptian prime minister Mahmoud El Nokrashy Pasha, signed “M. L. Nokrashy,” one page, 6.75 x 8.75, Prime Minister’s Office letterhead, October 22, 1948. Letter to Spanish diplomat Pablo de Azcárate, then serving as secretary of the Consular Truce Commission in Jerusalem on behalf of the United Nations, in full: “In reply to your message dated 21st October, received midnight 21/22 October regarding the time fixed by the Mediator p.i. for cease fire to be effective on both sides of the lines I have the honour to inform you that orders have been issued to cease fire on the Egyptian lines as from 2 p.m. Cairo time today.” In fine condition. This remarkable conveyance letter references the establishment of a third truce between Israel and Egypt, which went into effect on the date of this letter. However, despite its best intentions the cease fire did little to ebb the tide of battle, and on December 22 large numbers of Israel Defense Forces initiated Operation Horev with the objective of encircling the Egyptian Army in the Gaza strip and forcing the Egyptians into ending the war. The plan was a decisive Israeli victory, and on January 6, 1949, the Egyptian government announced they were willing to enter armistice negotiations. Starting Bid $300

“It’s time to put an end to considering the State as a kind of Court of Miracles!” 231. Benito Mussolini. ALS in Italian, signed “Mussolini,” one page, 8 x 10.25, Il Capo del Governo letterhead, May 12, 1928. Letter to Minister of Finance Giuseppe Volpi, in full (translated): “Four million was requested, and it was affirmed that this would be enough to get the Credito Paduano on its feet. I do not accept these leaps and bounds by which eight million is being requested today, as if millions grew on trees. The Credito Paduano can count on four million, as it had requested, but not a cent more. It’s time to put an end to considering the State as a kind of Court of Miracles!” In fine condition, with staple holes, and a small square file hole, to the upper left corner. Starting Bid $200

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Royalty

232. King Charles VIII. Monarch of the House of Valois (1470–1498) who

ruled as King of France from 1483 to his death in 1498. Rare LS in French, signed “Charles,” one page, 7.75 x 8.25, August 4, [circa 1495]. Letter to Lodovico il Moro, Duke of Milan, asking for protection and assistance for the bearer, Johan of Bullogna, the king’s valet, on his way through Milan to Ferrara for the purpose of escorting back to France the wife of the king’s seneschal, Guido Paganinio. Prominently signed at the conclusion by King Charles VIII, and countersigned by the king’s minister, Deguineau. Professionally inlaid into a larger sheet, which bears an affixed description below. In very good to fine condition, with light staining and creasing. Starting Bid $200

Marvelous oversized portrait of the new queen, captured by royal photographer Dorothy Wilding 233. Queen Elizabeth II. Amazing oversized matte-finish 15 x

19.5 portrait of Queen Elizabeth II wearing her glimmering crown jewels by Royal Court photographer Dorothy Wilding, affixed to its original 20.25 x 26.5 mount, neatly signed on the mount in fountain pen, “Elizabeth R, 1953.” Reverse of the mount bears Wilding’s studio label. Matted to an overall size of 20.25 x 26.5, covering the borders of the original mount. In very good to fine condition, with toning to the edges of the photos, and scattered light staining and flecks of emulsion loss. An absolutely stunning, impressively large portrait of the queen. Starting Bid $300

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Victory nears for Peter the Great in 1721

234. Peter the Great. LS in Russian, signed “Piotr,” one page, 7.25 x 9, May 7, 1721. Written in a clear secretarial hand and addressed to General Golitsyn “at Abo or wherever else he may be,” this important letter was written towards the end of Russia’s 21-year conflict with Sweden, during which Russia had occupied the Swedish territory of Finland. Peter acknowledges the receipt through his aide Aleksey Tatishchev of Goltitsyn’s letter about General Lacy in which he stated his intention of increasing the number of men and galleys going from Abo to Helsingfors, and instructs Golitsyn to carry this out according to his judgment. Peter adds a four-line confirmatory postscript in his own barely legible hand. In very good to fine condition, with splitting along the hinge, and repaired seal-related paper loss to the integral address leaf. The recipient of this letter, Prince Michael Golitsyn, was Commander-in-Chief in Finland, from which the southeastern city of Viipuri (now Vyburg in Russia) had become detached on its surrender by the Swedes in 1710. The successful raids on the Swedish coast by Peter’s Irish general, Count Peter Lacy, referred to in the present letter, during which 400 miles of coastline were ravaged, played a large part in forcing Sweden to conclude the Treaty of Nystad in September 1721. Sweden ceded Livonia, Ingria and Estonia in perpetuity to Russia, as well as the southeast corner of Finland adjacent to Viipuri; the remainder of Finland was however restored to Sweden. This humbling of Sweden, together with the large accession of territory to Russia, fully satisfied Peter’s war aims and proved the climax of his considerable reign. Starting Bid $1000

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Explorers and Archeologists Stanley responds to the daughter of President Grant 235. Henry M. Stanley. ALS, one page both sides, 4.5 x 7, 2 Richmond Terrace letterhead, June 11, 1892. Letter to Nellie Grant Sartoris, the daughter of former US President U. S. Grant, in full: “I am extremely sorry that I did not know earlier who you were when you called. It would have been a great pleasure to me to hear from the daughter of my friend General Grant. Mrs. Stanley is so enthusiastic an admirer of General Sherman that I am only sorry she did not see my ideal general and exemplar hence your father for I am sure she would have recognized that which stamps the born chief.” In fine condition, with light toning. Starting Bid $200

American West Amazing Boston playball archive, starring actor-turned-assassin J. Wilkes Booth 238. John Wilkes Booth. Extraordinary archive of 49 theatre play-

bills, circa 1861–1864, the vast majority from Boston, nine of which are for the Boston Museum and promote John Wilkes Booth and his plays. The others are for plays and theatres of the same era, and several boast Booth associations, including venues where he performed and actors or actresses with whom he co-starred (specifically Kate Reignolds and Maggie Mitchell). The playbills for Booth’s performances include: a double-sided playbill for a run of plays starring Booth from May 12–24, 1862, featuring a series of reviews of his performance in Richard III; Booth in the title role of Shakespeare’s Richard III on January 19, 1863; Booth as Claude Melnotte in Bulwer-Lytton’s The Lady of Lyons on January 20, 1863; Booth in the title role of Shakespeare’s Macbeth on January 26, 1863; Booth as Charles de Moor in the German-language tragedy Robbers, as well as Romeo in Romeo & Juliet and Alfred Evelyn in Money, beginning January 29, 1863; Booth as the main characters Phidias and Raphael Duchatlet in the drama The Marble Heart on February 2–4, 1863; a double Shakespearean engagement featuring Booth as Shylock in The Merchant of Venice and Petruchio in Katharine & Petruchio on February 13, 1863; Booth’s upcoming performances in Damon and Pythias, The Wife—A Tale of Mantua, The Marble Heart, and The Corsican Brothers, beginning May 18, 1864; and Booth’s upcoming performances as the main characters Phidias and Raphael Duchatlet in the drama The Marble Heart, Or—The Sculptor’s Dream on May 26, 1864. In overall fine condition. A comprehensive listing is available online at RRAuction.com Starting Bid $1000

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Great inscribed image of the Wild West showman 236. William F. ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody. Highly desirable glossy 3.25 x 4.75 photo of Buffalo Bill on horseback with natives and tipis in the background, neatly signed and inscribed in ink, “W. F. Cody, ‘Buffalo Bill,’ To J. P. Jones, Apr. 23d 1909.” In very good to fine condition, with light creasing, and light silvering to the darker areas of the image. Starting Bid $200

237. Wounded Knee Archive.

Significant archive of photographs and papers associated with Paul H. Weinert, one of twenty soldiers awarded the Medal of Honor for action at Wounded Knee who later joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West traveling show, comprising material associated with both of these aspects of his life and career. As a member of Battery ‘E’ of the 1st Regiment of US Artillery, Weinert took part in what was then called the Battle of Wounded Knee, but is now typically referred to as the Wounded Knee Massacre. On December 29, 1890, a detachment of the 7th Cavalry, supported by a battery of Hotchkiss guns from the 1st Artillery, surrounded a Lakota encampment near Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota. It is said that when the cavalrymen made contact to confiscate their arms, the gun of Black Coyote—a deaf Lakota who did not want to give up his expensive rifle—accidentally went off, prompting the American troops to fire on the largely disarmed and helpless Native American Indians. When commanding officer Lt. Harry Hawthorne was wounded, Weinert assumed command and directed the artillery fire, successfully clearing out a key position in a ravine that had been occupied by Sioux warriors. He and the second cannoneer remained under heavy fire throughout the battle, advancing their gun after each discharge to attain better positions. In the end, between 250 and 300 Lakota men, women, and children were killed in the lopsided fight, which saw just 25 American deaths. Weinert was one of twenty men awarded the Medal of Honor for gallantry at Wounded Knee, his citation reading: ‘Taking the place of his commanding officer who had fallen severely wounded, he gallantly served his piece, after each fire advancing it to a better position.’ In modern times, these Medals of Honor have proven controversial—in 2001, the National Congress of American Indians passed two resolutions condemning the military awards and called on the US government to rescind them, though that has not taken place. In addition to his military service throughout the 1890s, Weinert joined the famous traveling Western show of William F. ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody, serving as its cavalry standard bearer in 1896. Highlights include: three graphic original mounted albumen photographs of the aftermath of the Battle of Wounded Knee published by the Northwestern Photographic Co. of Chadron, Nebraska; ten mounted albumen portraits of Paul H. Weinert throughout his military career, highlighted by a rare early oversized portrait of him wearing his newly earned Medal of Honor; more than twenty other photographs, including cabinet photos of Annie Oakley and Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce, and an oversized mounted photo of a Sioux and Chippewa peace council hosted by Buffalo Bill; an admission ticket for the 1897 season of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, signed in ink by William F. ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody; three handwritten letters by Paul H. Weinert; four of Paul H. Weinert’s military commissions, dated from 1890 to 1898; two of Paul H. Weinert’s Army of the United States discharge papers; and other ephemera associated with Weinert and his family. In overall very good to fine condition. A comprehensive inventory and additional photos are available online at RRAuction.com. Starting Bid $500 66 |

May 8, 2019 | NOTABLES


239. Francisco Linares Alcantara

240. Alexander III of Russia

241. Anna of Russia

243. Vincent Auriol

244. David Ben-Gurion

245. David Ben-Gurion

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

247. Otto von Bismarck

248. James G. Blaine

251. Cardinals

252. Jean-Antoine Chaptal

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

249. Johann Elert Bode Starting Bid $200

242. Francois Arago Starting Bid $200

246. Marcellin Berthelot

Starting Bid $200

250. Martin Buber Starting Bid $200

253. Jean-Nicolas Corvisart Starting Bid $200

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254. Dalai Lama Starting Bid $200

255. Louis de Broglie

256. Charles de Gaulle

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

257. John DeLorean

258. Porfirio Diaz

259. Benjamin Disraeli

260. John E. Douglas

261. Elizabeth, Queen Mother

262. Oliver Ellsworth

263. Everest Mountaineers

264. Philo T. Farnsworth

265. Maria Feodorovna

266. Filipino Presidents

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

267. Howard Florey

268. Grand Duchess Olga

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


269. Jacques Hadamard

Starting Bid $200

270. Werner Heisenberg

Starting Bid $200

271. Hermann von Helmholtz

272. Donald Johanson and Richard Leakey

273. Ernest Jones

274. Alfred Kastler

275. Helen Keller

276. Helen Keller

277. John Harvey Kellogg

278. King Edward VII

279. King Edward VIII

280. King George VI

281. King William IV

282. Henry Kissinger

283. Leonard Kleinrock

284. Bernard Germain de Lacepede

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 69


285. Arthur Lee Starting Bid $200

286. Joseph Lister Starting Bid $200

287. Hendrik Antoon Lorentz

288. John McCain

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

289. Medical Researchers

290. Golda Meir

291. Reinhold Messner

292. Mother Teresa

293. Mother Teresa

294. Mother Teresa

295. Fridtjof Nansen

296. Napoleon III

297. Alexei Nikolaevich, Tsarevich of Russia

298. Paul I of Russia

299. Pedro II of Brazil

300. Physicists

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


301. Pomare IV

302. Francis A. Pratt

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

303. Prince Charles Starting Bid $200

304. Prince Napoleon Bonaparte Starting Bid $200

305. Princess Grace and Prince Rainier

306. Princess Stephanie of Monaco

307. Queen Emma of Hawaii

308. Queen Victoria

309. Yitzhak Rabin

310. Yitzhak Rabin

311. Grigori Rasputin

312. Martin Rees

313. Charles Richet

314. Bertrand Russell

315. Carl Sagan

316. Eisaku Sato

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

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317. Albert Schweitzer Starting Bid $200

321. Supreme Court Starting Bid $200

318. Glenn Seaborg Starting Bid $200

322. Aung San Suu Kyi Starting Bid $200

319. Charles Spurgeon

320. Potter Stewart

323. Texas Governors

324. Texas: Richard Coke

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

325. Texas: Currency

326. Texas: Currency

327. Texas: Currency

328. Texas: Currency

329. Texas: Currency

330. Texas: Currency

331. Texas: Currency

332. Texas: Early Map

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


333. Texas: Miriam A. Ferguson

334. Texas: A. C. Horton

335. Texas: Elisha M. Pease

Starting Bid $200

337. Margaret Thatcher

Starting Bid $200

338. Samuel-Auguste Tissot

339. Titanic: Dean and Shuman

340. Titanic: Alexander J. Littlejohn

341. John Trumbull

342. Domingo Vรกsquez

343. Fred Vinson

344. Earl Warren

345. Watergate: Bob Woodward

346. Daniel Webster

347. Duke and Duchess of Windsor

Starting Bid $200

336. Margaret Thatcher

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 73


military 348. Arthur St. Clair. American soldier and politician (1737–1818) who rose to

the rank of major general in the Continental Army during the American Revolution but lost his command after a controversial retreat from Fort Ticonderoga. Handaddressed and free-franked address leaf, measuring 13.25 x 8.5 unfolded with a center panel of 7.25 x 3.5, addressed by St. Clair to general William Irvine, “Public Service, General Irwine at Carlisle,” and franked in the lower left, “Maj’r Gen’l St. Clair.” In fine condition. After the Revolutionary War, St. Clair and Irvine served together as members of Pennsylvania’s delegation to the Second Continental Congress. It is interesting to note that in the published letters of George Washington to Gen. Irvine, his name is misspelled “Irwine” as St. Clair has penned on this address leaf. Starting Bid $200

A dire report on troops from the James River— “It is with pain I say that the number of Sick daily increases” 349. Friedrich von Steuben. Prussian soldier (1730-1794) who provided invaluable aid to the American Revolution, joining George Washington at Valley Forge. Revolutionary War-dated ALS signed “Steuben, Maj. Gen,” four pages on two adjoining sheets, 15 x 12.25, June 3, 1781. Written from the Port of James River, a lengthy letter to Archibald Cary, the first speaker of the Senate of Virginia, in full: “In my last I had the honor to give you a general State of the Brig’a, Line. I hope you laid it before the House of Assembly as it proper they should know the number of Troops they have in the field. I now take the liberty to acquaint you of the Situation of those Troops who are assembled at this place, their numbers you will see by the inclosed Return—the greatest part of these men came in destitute of any kind of cloathing. What I could find in the State Stores I have ordered to be distributed and by comparing the Returns inclosed you will see how many are yet unprovided with articles necessary to take the Field. It is with pain I say that the number of Sick daily increases, a natural consequence of their being exposed to the humidity.” The second and third pages, which are not visible, read as follows: “of the Earth & Air without the necessary covering of their bodies. Desertion is another consequence. The Soldier who would with pleasure risk his life in the Field of battle revolts at the Idea of perishing thru misery in a Camp. I had no idea of its being in the power of the State to fit out their men completely. All I hoped was that they would at least furnish Shirts, Shoes, Coverhalls & Hunting Shirts or Summer Jackets. But on the other hand I had still less an idea that the State of Virginia would in the month of June be unable to supply these trifling articles to 500 men, not a sixth part of the number ordered to be raised, now especially as every one of the above Articles can easily be made in the Country. The Troops are armed with the arms which arrived from Philadelphia. They are tolerable good but exceeding small and not a single cartridge box came with them, we have about miserable Cartridge boxes which at another time would be thrown out as unfit for service. So early as in November last both General Green & myself mentioned in our requisitions the importance of this Article and the necessity of this & Saddles for the Cavalry being the first objects considered, as they required most time to make them – but not a single one has been furnished by the State indeed I am ignorant of any have been to this day ordered. It is really dreadfull at such time as this to see a Battalion perishing in the Wood, unfit to be sent into the Field or even to be exercised for want of cloaths. I beg you my Dear Sir to advise me how to remedy this. You must be sensible of the pain it gives me to have such representations as these to make – but it is necessary and I beg you to lay it before.” The fourth page, in full: “Honorable House in order that I may be justified before them & good people of the State and that the detention of Troops here may not be imputed to my negligence. With very great esteem I have the honor to be Your very Hum. Servant.” Matted and framed to an overall size of 20.75 x 17.75. In fine condition. Starting Bid $300 74 |

May 8, 2019 | MILITARY


350. USS Constitution.

Foundry cast bronze bookend made from metal reclaimed during the 1927 restoration of the USS Constitution. The bookend measures 5.75 x 6.5 and features a ship’s wheel on a lead-weighted base, which reads: “This material was taken from US Frigate Constitution 1927.” The inner barrel of the wheel features an embossed image of the three-masted heavy frigate, with raised text: “Old Ironsides, Launched 1797, 1804 Tripoli, 1812 Guerriere Java, 1815 Cyane Levant, U.S. Frigate Constitution.” In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

351. USS Constitution.

Block of wood removed from the hull of the USS Constitution during the frigate’s historic 1927 restoration, measuring 5.25 x 2.5 x 1.5, with the original bronze plate reading: “This material was taken from the original hull of the U.S. Frigate Constitution, Keel laid 1794, Rebuilding 1927.” In fine condition. Untouched pieces of the original Constitution hull showing obvious wear from years of service are the most desirable and scarce of the relic items from the 1927 restoration. Most of the relics were repurposed souvenir items made from the salvaged material. This example is untouched and clearly shows the wear and punishment sustained by the ship’s hull including an original nail above the bronze plate. Starting Bid $200

Leading figures of the Union cause 352. Civil War Album. Leather-bound autograph album, 8 x 10.75, containing 20 items signed by notable figures of the Civil War, including first level executives of the Lincoln and Grant cabinets, as well as several high-ranking officials of the Unionist war effort; some of the items are loosely laid into the album. Signers include: Vice Presidents Hannibal Hamlin (ALS) and Schuyler Colfax (ALS), Secretary of State William H. Seward (DS), Attorney General Edward Bates (ALS), Postmaster General William Dennison, Jr (ALS), General-in-Chief George B. McClellan (ALS), and Major Generals Ambrose Burnside (signature), George Meade (ALS), Winfield Scott Hancock (ALS), Joseph Hooker (ALS), Daniel Sickles (ALS), Benjamin Butler (signature), and Wesley Merritt (ALS). In overall very good to fine condition, with the front cover detached and the spine damaged; inner pages are all clean and fine. Starting Bid $200

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“Lee’s whole Army has surrendered”—Sheridan’s dispatch in a rare Ohio broadside 353. Robert E. Lee.

Very rare printed broadside from the Western Reserve Chronicle of Warren, Ohio, headed, “Chronicle--Extra,” one page, 6 x 9, reproducing General Philip H. Sheridan’s telegrams to U. S. Grant about Robert E/ Lee’s retreat and surrender. In full: “The following despatches have just been received: ‘Lt. Gen’l Grant—I have the honor to report that the enemy made a stand at the junction of the Burkesville Station Road, upon which he was retreating. I attacked them with two Divisions of the 6th Corps and routed them handsomely, making a connection with the Cavalry. I am still pressing on with both Cavalry and Infantry. Up to this time we have captured Gen’ls Ewell, Kesshall, Button, Coorse, De Barry and Curtiss, several thousand prisoners, 14 pieces of Artillery with Caissons, and a large number of wagons. If the thing is pressed, I think Lee will surrender. P. H. Sheridan. Later: Lee’s whole Army has surrendered. P. H. Sheridan.” Encapsulated in Mylar and in fine condition. Starting Bid $300

355. Nathaniel Lyon. Veteran

of the Seminole and MexicanAmerican Wars (1818-1861) who was the first Union general to be killed in the American Civil War and is noted for his actions in the state of Missouri at the beginning of the conflict. Scarce ALS signed “N. Lyon,” one page, 7.75 x 10, July 4, 1860. Written from Fort Riley in Kansas, a letter to Charles De Vinaldi, in full: “I have been trying to find time to write you an article for this week but cannot do it. I have had my hands full of public matters. Your note of the 30th Ult. is received & though your suggestions are appropriate enough I cannot well conform to them as it is impossible for me to write plainer than I have done.” Affixed by the left edge to a slightly larger sheet. In very good condition, with old repairs to fold splits, light soiling and staining, and a rusty paperclip impression to the top edge. Starting Bid $200

354. William Henry Fitzhugh ‘Rooney’ Lee. Second son of

Robert E. Lee who served as a Confederate cavalry general during the Civil War (1837–1891). ALS signed “W. H. F. Lee,” one page, 5.25 x 8.75, House of Representatives letterhead, August 15, 1888. Letter to Dr. Leddon, in full: “Much obliged for you letter. I want to see people of Orange. If I do not go to court how can I see them! Tell Mrs. Novell that I will be on the lookout. With my kindest regards and in great haste.” In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | MILITARY

356. Elizabeth B. Custer. Wife and biographer (1842–1933)

of ill-fated General George Armstrong Custer. Uncommon 4.25 x 6.5 cabinet portrait of George A. Custer wearing military attire in a half-length pose, signed and inscribed on the reverse by his wife in black ink, “For Mr. Parks, with the gratitude of Elizabeth B. Custer.” Encapsulated in a PSA/DNA authentication holder. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200


The Manhattan Project director watches a film “on the decision to drop the bomb”

357. George A. Custer. Rare Planters National Bank check, 6.5 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Custer, “G. A. Custer,” payable to Cash for $31, September 5, 1872. Encapsulated in a PSA/ DNA authentication holder. In fine condition. Starting Bid $500

358. Desmond Doss.

Combat medic with the 77th Infantry Division in World War II, who famously saved 75 men during the Battle of Okinawa (1919–2006). His heroic actions not only earned him the unique distinction of becoming the first and only conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor during World War II, but his story was later vividly retold in the Oscar-winning 2016 film Hacksaw Ridge. Series 1995 one-dollar bill, signed in black ballpoint, “Desmond T. Doss, CMH,” signifying his receipt of the Congressional Medal of Honor. In fine condition. Consignor notes that this was signed in person at an Independence Day parade in Atlanta on July 4, 1997. Starting Bid $200

360. Leslie R. Groves. Army officer (1896–1970) who headed the Manhattan Project and oversaw the construction of the Pentagon. Two handwritten drafts of letters in pencil by Groves, one signed “L. R. G.,” on opposite sides of a single 7.25 x 10.5 sheet of personal letterhead, December 31, 1964 and January 6, 1965. The first, to Frank L. Boyden, headmaster of Deerfield Academy, encloses a check and discusses family matters. The second, to Fred Freed of NBC, in part: “Naturally I watched your production on the decision to drop the bomb with a great deal of interest. I thought you did very well indeed. You must have had a most difficult time in cutting the film down to the final length. But I could not see where you lost any of the overall picture. I would appreciate it if you could send me a copy of the script. I would like to place it with a few amplifying comments with my rather complete papers in the National Archives.” In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Inscribed to the widow of the Third Army’s commander 359. John J. Pershing. Signed book: My Experiences in the World

War, Vols. 1 and 2. First edition. NY: Frederick A. Stokes, 1931. Hardcover with dust jacket, 6.75 x 9.5, 400 pages. Signed and inscribed on the first free end page of the first volume in fountain pen, “For Mrs. J. T. Dickman, In memory of the services of her distinguished husband in the World War, and with sincere good wishes, John J. Pershing.” In overall very good to fine condition, with wear and chipping to the priceclipped dust jackets. Joseph Theodore Dickman (1857–1927) was a United States Army officer who saw service in five wars, rising to the rank of major general. When the Third Army was established in 1918, Pershing placed it under Dickman’s command. The Third Army’s goal was to advance to the Rhein and hold the Coblenz bridgehead, then prepare to serve after the war as the Army of Occupation of the Rhineland. A unique and important association copy of Pershing’s memoirs of the war, in which Dickman is mentioned a total of fifteen times. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 77


Publishing contract for “The Manhattan Project by Leslie R. Groves” 361. Leslie R. Groves. Army officer (1896–1970) who headed the Manhattan Project and oversaw the construction of the Pentagon. DS, signed “Leslie R. Groves,” three pages, 8.5 x 13.75, October 7, 1960. Publication contract between Groves and Harper & Brothers for “a Work now entitled ‘The Manhattan Project by Leslie R. Groves,’” to be between 100,000 and 150,000 words, and sold at a retail price of not less than $4.00. The contract outlines the terms for an advance of $2,500, as well as future royalties to be split between Groves and his son, Richard H. Groves. Signed at the conclusion in ballpoint by Leslie R. Groves, his son Richard H. Groves, and an official from Harper & Brothers. In fine condition, with usual document wear. Groves’s history of the Manhattan Project was released in 1962, under the title Now It Can Be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project. Starting Bid $200

362. Chester Nimitz. Matte-finish 13.5 x 10.5 photo of Chester

Nimitz signing the Japanese surrender aboard the USS Missouri on September 2, 1945, signed and inscribed in the lower border in black ink, “To Myron L. Boardman—with best wishes, C. W. Nimitz, Fleet Admiral, USN.” The desk in the picture bears a facsimile signature inherent to the original photograph. Framed to a slightly larger size. In fine condition. Myron L. Boardman was a publisher at Prentice Hall, a publishing house that released several books co-edited by Fleet Admiral Nimitz, including Sea Power: A Naval History and Triumph in the Pacific: The Navy’s Struggle Against Japan. Starting Bid $200

The Navy’s first flying ace 363. Edward O’Hare. Lieutenant Commander Edward Henry ‘Butch O’Hare

(1914–1943) was an American naval aviator of the United States Navy, who became the first naval recipient of the Medal of Honor in World War II. Rare vintage pencil signature, “E. H. O’Hare,” on an off-white 5 x 3 sheet, with inscription in another hand and dated to May 6, 1942. In very good condition, with light staining and several vertical folds. Consignor notes that the signature was obtained when O’Hare visited Miami in 1942. Starting Bid $200

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364. George S. Patton. World War I-dated ALS signed “George S. Patton, Jr.,” one page both sides, 8.25 x 10.5, April 9, 1918. Letter to his mother, Ruth Wilson Patton, about the death of his father-in-law, in full: “I have not yet heard if you had left Thomasville before Mr. Ayer died or not. I rather hope for B’s sake you were there for poor Mrs. Ayer must have carried on terribly I feel so sorry for her. This has been hanging over her head a long time. Mr. Ayer ought really to be congratulated as he went in possession of his faculties and was apparently well to the last. He might have been an imbecile for years. I hope you have had plenty of rain we have enough to lend some it has rained every day for two weeks and is still at it. I have got Capt. Viner here with me now also a Capt. Brett both of them regulars and very fine officers. The men are mostly good too and all large fellows and full of pep. Personally I am full of pip or some other disease I have had a headake for three days which I hardly ever have. It’s most exasperating but I shall be well before you get this. The last time I saw John he looked fine and seemed so also. He went to a lot of trouble to get me promoted but don’t thank him as that would appear as if he had done me a favor instead of a justice.” In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

366. Napoleon.

LS in French, signed “Np,” one page, 7.25 x 9, March 4, 1813. Letter to Geraud Duroc, Duc de Frioul, asking what orders were given to him by the minister of war. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light foxing. Starting Bid $200

367. Duke of Wellington.

365. Napoleon. Manuscript DS, in French, signed “Nap,” one page, 7.75 x 12, April 6, 1808. Document pertaining to the promotion of an officer to “Colonel of the Regiment of Chasseurs Prince Royal.” Boldly and prominently signed at the conclusion by Napoleon at Bordeaux. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Hand-addressed and free franked envelope panel, 4.5 x 2.75, signed in the lower left, “Free, Wellington,” and dated November 25, 1825. In very good condition, with trimmed edges, light staining, and a tear to the top edge center. Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

369. Battle of the Wilderness

370. Louis-Alexandre Berthier

371. Confederate Generals

372. Enola Gay and Bockscar

373. Enola Gay: Tibbets and Sweeney

374. William Halsey and Ernest J. King

375. O. O. Howard

376. George C. Marshall

377. Return J. Meigs, Sr

378. Colin Powell

379. Ernie Pyle

380. Robert L. Scott

381. Louis-Gabriel Suchet

382. Sylvanus Thayer

383. Tuskegee Airmen: Charles McGee

368. Army Generals

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


aviation 384. Amelia Earhart. Signed

book: The Fun of It: Random Records of My Own Flying and of Women in Aviation. First edition. NY: Brewer, Warren & Putnam, 1932. Hardcover, 5.25 x 8.25, 218 pages. Signed on the first free end page in black ink by Amelia Earhart. The book retains its original mini-record of Earhart’s international broadcast in a sleeve affixed to the inside of the back cover. Autographic condition: fine, with an ownership signature to the upper right corner. Book condition: VG/None, with edgewear and bumped corners. A fascinating book detailing Earhart’s growing obsession with flying, with the final chapter chronicling her historic transatlantic flight. Starting Bid $200

Presentation edition of Lindbergh’s The Spirit of St. Louis

386. Orville Wright. The Winters National Bank check, 8

x 3, filled out in another hand and signed by Orville Wright, payable to The Dayton Power & Light Co. for $5.88, October 13, 1944. Cloth-matted and framed with two engraved plates, a portrait, and an image of the first flight at Kitty Hawk to an overall size of 19.75 x 18. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

387. Chuck Yeager. Two glossy 385. Charles Lindbergh. Signed book: The Spirit of

St. Louis. Limited presentation edition, number 679. NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1953. Hardcover, 5.75 x 8.5, 562 pages. Signed on the colophon in fountain pen, “Charles A. Lindbergh.” Autographic condition: fine. Book condition VG+/ None. A most attractive example of this high point of aviation literature. Starting Bid $200

photos, 7 x 5 and 10 x 8, both signed and inscribed in black ink by Chuck Yeager, with images including: Yeager posing next to his Glamorous Glennis and a U.S. Air Force jet on the tarmac next to a large engine. In overall very good to fine condition, with scattered light creasing to the larger photo. Starting Bid $200

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space Enormous collection of Golden Age NASA photos, negatives, and transparencies 388. Astronauts. Tremendous archive of over 1,500

official NASA photo negatives, transparencies, and prints documenting the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo space programs during the 1960s and early 1970s. The majority of these photos, approximately 4 x 5 and 5 x 4, are housed in their original manila NASA photo lab pouch with captions and annotations denoting tracking number, mission information, participant name(s), and date. Consisting of numerous candid and staged images never-before-viewed by the public, the collection focuses greatest on Project Gemini, a program designed to develop and implement space travel techniques capable of supporting Project Apollo’s objective of landing astronauts on the Moon; running from 1961 to 1966 and featuring two unmanned flights (Gemini 1 and 2) and 10 two-crew manned flights (Gemini 3–12), NASA’s hugely successful sophomore program is exhaustively covered with an array of behind-the-scenes moments offering a unique window into the lives of NASA’s most storied explorers. Documenting the intensity and scope of America’s three-headed space program, the photographs include astronauts undergoing pre- and post-flight medical testing, as well as simulations that tested performance in zero-gravity chambers and centrifuges. Of considerable interest is the large assortment of photos documenting the Jungle Survival School, a summer training course in the Panamanian jungle in 1963 and 1967, where astronauts were trained to build shelters, find food and water, and identify venomous snakes. The archive also features a wealth of images recording the laborious process of flight preparation, such as suit and equipment tests, insertion, and egress and recovery procedure, with photos also offering a glimpse into more mundane routines, like individual and team portraits, preflight breakfast, and relaxing in the White Room lounge chairs. Amazing images of liftoff, the Earth, and the desolate lunar surface are also distinct highlights of the collection. Astronauts featured in the archive include (alphabetical): Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong, Frank Borman, Scott Carpenter, Gene Cernan, Michael Collins, Charles Conrad, Walt Cunningham, Dick Gordon, Gus Grissom, Jim Irwin, James Lovell, Jim McDivitt, Edgar Mitchell, Wally Schirra, Dave Scott, Alan Shepard, Tom Stafford, Deke Slayton, Jack Swigert, Ed White II, and John Young. In overall fine condition. A truly sensational photographic archive documenting the golden age of space discovery. Starting Bid $1000

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View additional images online at www.RRAuction.com


389. Alan Bean and Edgar Mitchell. Desirable 1:48 scale

model of the Apollo Lunar Excursion Module (LEM), beautifully signed on the black base in silver ink by two moonwalkers, “Alan Bean, Apollo 12” and “Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14.” The complete model and base assembly measures approximately 8˝ x 7˝ x 8˝. In very good to fine condition, with the hinge of one antenna broken, and another smaller antenna bent. Starting Bid $200

390. Moonwalkers. Three DVDs for the 2007 space

documentary The Wonder of It All, individually signed in silver ink or white paint by a moonwalker: “Alan Bean, Apollo 12,” “Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14,” and “Charlie Duke, Apollo 16.” The Mitchell DVD is also signed the film’s director, Jeffrey Roth. In overall fine condition. The DVD discs are included. Starting Bid $200

392. Buzz Aldrin. Iconic

official color 10 x 8 NASA lithograph showing Aldrin walking on the lunar surface, with Armstrong reflected in his visor, signed and inscribed in black felt tip, “To Sam Kloda, With Best Wishes, Buzz Aldrin.” In very good to fine condition, with creasing to the lower right corner and mild foxing to edges. Starting Bid $200

393. Buzz Aldrin. Of-

391. Mercury 7. Extremely desirable cover, 6.5 x 3.5, with a

cachet of a rocket launch reading “Missile Fired from...Cape Canaveral,” postmarked at Patrick Air Force Base on February 20, 1962, the launch date of John Glenn’s Friendship 7 spacecraft, signed in black ink, “J. H. Glenn, Jr.,” “D. K. Slayton,” and “Virgil I. Grissom,” in black felt tip, “Gordon Cooper,” “Wally Schirra,” and “Scott Carpenter,” and in blue ballpoint, “Alan B. Shepard, Jr.” Archivally matted and framed with a color photo of the Mercury Seven to an overall size of 13 x 21.25. In fine condition. Starting Bid $300

ficial color 8 x 10 NASA lithograph of LMP Aldrin posing in his white space suit against a lunar backdrop, signed and inscribed in thin black felt tip, “To Sam Stein, with best wishes, Buzz Aldrin.” In very good to fine condition, with some light bends and creases. Starting Bid $200

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The coveted Apollo 11 ‘Type 1’ insurance cover, with bold pre-launch crew signatures 395. Apollo 11. Immensely desirable Apollo 11 ‘Type 1’ crew insurance postal cover with a color cachet of lunar surface activities, postmarked at Houston on July 20, 1969, the moon landing date of the lunar module Eagle, signed in black felt tip just prior to launch by Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin. These covers were flown to Houston after launch for cancellation by Apollo 10 Commander Tom Stafford in his T-38 jet. Archivally double-matted and framed with a photo of the crew in their white space suits to an overall size of 15.25 x 19.5. In very fine condition. The famous insurance covers, first produced for Apollo 11, were to provide financial security for astronauts’ families in case of disaster. They have earned near-legendary status as the ultimate space-related philatelic item and one of the most sought-after formats for astronaut autographs. Starting Bid $1000

396. Neil Armstrong. Ex-

394. Buzz Aldrin. Four books signed on an opening page

in ink or felt tip by Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, including: Magnificent Desolation, Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration (also signed by Leonard David), Reaching for the Moon, and Welcome to Mars: Making a Home on the Red Planet. In overall fine condition. Starting Bid $200

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tremely desirable official color 8 x 10 NASA lithograph of Armstrong posing in his white space suit against a lunar backdrop, boldly signed in blue felt tip. In very good to fine condition, with a moderate horizontal bend across the center of the photo, and a light paperclip impression to the top edge. Accompanied by the original NASA transmittal envelope. Uninscribed Armstrong white space suit lithographs are considered a pinnacle of space autograph collecting, and this example boasts a particularly strong, bold signature. Starting Bid $300


397. Neil Armstrong. Official

color 8 x 10 NASA lithograph of Armstrong in his white space suit against a lunar background, signed in blue felt tip, “Neil Armstrong,” with two ‘First Man on the Moon’ postage stamps applied over an inscription, canceled on the tenth anniversary of the lunar landing. In fine condition, with a paperclip impression to the top edge. Starting Bid $200

398. Neil Armstrong. Appealing

color glossy 5 x 5.75 postcard photo of LMP Buzz Aldrin standing on the lunar surface, his visor showing a small reflection of the photographer, CDR Neil Armstrong, signed in black felt tip by the first moonwalker. In very fine condition. Accompanied by copies of the original mailing envelope and autograph request letter addressed to Armstrong by a professor from Purdue University, the alma mater of Armstrong, Gene Cernan, Gus Grissom, and many other astronauts. Starting Bid $200

399. Michael Collins. Color satin-finish 8 x 10 photo of CMP Collins posing in his white space suit against a lunar backdrop, signed in blue felt tip, “Michael Collins, Apollo XI.” In very fine condition. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Astronaut Central. Starting Bid $200

Trifecta of Apollo 12 items signed by the crew, with rare swatch from Yankee Clipper reentry parachute 400. Apollo 12. Impressive assortment of items signed by each crew member of the Apollo 12 mission: a rare three-piece 5 x 3.25 swatch of fabric from the Command Module Yankee Clipper reentry parachute, consisting of two panels and upper band, signed on the left panel in black ink, “Charles Conrad, Jr., Reentry Apollo XII,” with right panel featuring a golden 1˝ Apollo 12 medallion; a 3.75 x 5.25 swatch of Beta cloth featuring the Apollo 12 mission insignia, signed in black ballpoint, “Alan L. Bean, Lunar Module Pilot”; and a color glossy 3 x 3 photo of the crew posing in their white space suits, signed in black ink, “Dick Gordon, Astronaut.” The items are matted together to an overall size of 9 x 16. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by full letters of authenticity from Zarelli Space Authentication for the Bean and Conrad signatures. Starting Bid $300 401. John Young.

Uncommon NASA recovery cover, 6.5 x 3.75, with a color cachet honoring the United States Navy Recovery Force of the Apollo 16 mission, postmarked on the USS Ticonderoga with the recovery date of April 27, 1972, signed in black felt tip by John Young, with a 2.5 x 2 swatch of Beta cloth affixed to upper right corner and lower right bearing an affixed slip signed by Gerald Hammerle, a member of the Apollo 16 recovery team. Matted with an information sheet, images of Young and Hammerle, and a 5 x 5 Beta cloth swatch bearing the Apollo 16 emblem and an autopen signature of Young. In fine condition. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from Zarelli Space Authentication. Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 85


402. Scott Carpenter

403. Gene Cernan

404. Charles Conrad

405. Charlie Duke

406. John Glenn

407. John Glenn

408. Richard Gordon

409. Fred Haise

412. Edgar Mitchell

413. Dave Scott

416. Space Shuttle ALT Crews

417. John Young

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

410. Jim Irwin

Starting Bid $200

414. Alan Shepard Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

411. Mercury Astronauts

Starting Bid $200

415. Alan Shepard Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


art, architecture, & design 418. Yaacov Agam. Israeli sculptor and experimental artist (born 1928) known for his contributions to optical and kinetic art. Unusual color limited edition 14 x 15 ‘Agamograph’ lenticular print, numbered 32/99, signed in the lower border in felt tip by the artist, “Agam.” Presented in Agam’s custom frame to an overall size of 24.5 x 25.5. In fine condition. An ‘Agamograph’ uses lenticular technology that changes the artwork depending on the angle from which it is viewed. Starting Bid $200

Banksy attacks Paris with revamped CD artwork

419. Banksy. Rare first issue of the ‘Paris’ CD by enigmatic street artist Banksy, who reinterpreted approximately 400 to 500 copies of Paris Hilton’s debut album before placing them in 48 record stores across the United Kingdom in late August 2006. The ‘spoof’ CD package includes:

CD booklet with cover artwork depicting a topless Hilton, with inner pages including the following images and captions: Hilton emerging from a vehicle next to a sidewalk of homeless people, “90% of Success is just Showing up”; Hilton in a sultry halflength pose, “Every CD you buY puts me even further out Of youR league”; Hilton lounging on a sofa, “Life wasn’t meant to be fair”; Hilton as a nude mannequin, “Thou SHALT NoT WORSHIP FALSE ICoNS”; Hilton in a head-and-shoulders pose, “RACE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE PILE!” with line below, “A special limited edition remix”; and black back cover, “Every time someone asks me how I am i hesitate for a Little bit too long.” CD-ROM disc with remixed music by DJ Danger Mouse, with “Paris, X” in black felt tip. Jewel case with reworked song label to upper left, which reads: “Paris Hilton, Debut Album, Featuring ‘Why Am I Famous?’ ‘What Have I Done?’ and ‘What Am I For?’” Inner tray artwork with full-length image of Hilton’s body posing with a microphone, and her head replaced with that of her Chihuahua, Tinkerbell; the back of sleeve features the original barcode. In fine condition. The Banksy–Paris CD remakes are among the most legendary and sought-after marketing spoofs in pop culture history, with this very limited example representing the rare opportunity to own an original work from the notorious street artist. Starting Bid $300

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Dali signs and sketches for an injured friend, coupled with a 1949 handwritten letter mentioning Evita Peron 420. Salvador Dali. Magnificent pairing of items signed by surrealist master Salvador Dali, including: a partial plaster cast for a right wrist injury, 3.5˝ x 7.5˝ x 1.25˝, signed on the top in black felt tip, “Dali, 1975,” who adds a small sketch of a crown; and an attractively penned, untranslated ALS in French, signed upside down at the top of the sheet, “Dali, 1949,” one page, 7.25 x 10.5, Del Monte Lodge stationery, circa 1949, addressed to the original wearer of the included cast, Princess Helene Obolensky. In the letter Dali broaches the subject of mortality over the death of a mutual friend, a patron of the arts by the name of Mr. Bemberg who purchased many of the artist’s paintings. Staying on the topic of mortality, Dali mentions another shared acquaintance in Argentinian First Lady Evita Peron, whose repeated fainting episodes had become a matter of concern. Dali runs out of writing room and proceeds to finish the letter counter-clockwise around the periphery of the sheet. In overall very good to fine condition, with expected wear to the cast, and short splits to ends of the intersecting folds of the letter. In the 1930s Helene Obolensky married her husband, Prince Alexander Petrovich Obolensky, one of the last members of the Rurik family dynasty, and began working for French fashion designer Coco Chanel as her personal assistant. In this enviable post Obolensky was enabled to meet and befriend celebrities like Pablo Picasso, Evita Peron, Grace Kelly, and Salvador and Gala Dali, a couple with whom the Obolenskys would share many a dinner. The offered signed cast with sketch was on Obolensky’s arm when she and Dali had dined in 1975. Upon explaining to Dali that ‘It was just put on that morning,’ the artist leaned over and autographed the cast, evidently telling her, ‘I signed it large so nobody else will sign it.’ Aware of Dali’s growing fame, Helene kept the cast clean until it was removed from her arm the following month. She stored it in a shoe box and set it on a shelf in her bedroom closet where it would remain for the next 40 years. Starting Bid $300

The influential Impressionist writes to the Carmen librettist 421. Edgar Degas. Important French painter and sculptor (1834–1917) regarded as one of the founders of Impressionism. Scarce ALS in French, signed “Degas,” one page, 4 x 5, no date. Letter to his close friend, Ludovic Halevy, the writer and librettist of Carmen, informing him that he will not be able to attend dinner, but promises that he will come visit. In fine condition. Handwritten letters and notes by Degas are quite scarce and do not come to market often. Degas executed gelatin silver prints of numerous members of the Halevy family. A superb artistic association piece. Starting Bid $300

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“I am rather immune to abuse and praise” 422. Lucian Freud. British painter (1922-2011) known for

his psychologically intense, thickly impastoed portrait and figure paintings. Very rare ALS in pencil, one page, 8.5 x 8.25, no date, but circa January 1984. Letter to Angela Dyer, in full: “Lawrence Gowing sent me a copy of your letter to him. I don’t know if he’s had any letters about the book but I certainly have not. Though I am rather immune to abuse and praise I had a feeling of exitement [sic] on reading what you wrote that I’ve only felt on suddenly coming across someone I really like the look of. So, right in the middle of painting my mothers stomach this morning, I read it again.” In fine condition. Accompanied by a letter from artist Lawrence Gowing, dated January 24, 1984, thanking Dyer for her “totally rewarding and transporting fan letter,” and noting that he “sent it straight on to Lucian…You may have already heard from him.” Also includes the original mailing envelope for the Gowing letter. Starting Bid $500

The famed Civil War photographer honors his personal trainer 423. Alexander Gardner.

. LS signed “Alex Gardner,” three pages on two sheets, 7.75 x 9.75, May 9, 1866. Letter to strongman and gymnast Abner S. Brady inviting him to a benefit at Grover’s Theatre in Washington to be held in his honor, signed at the conclusion by over forty Washington notables. In part: “We the undersigned, members & friends of your Gymnasium, in the high appreciation in which you are held by us, as well for your indefatigable zeal in promoting the physical well being of all who have placed themselves under your instruction & care, as for your uniformly genial and exemplary deportment as a citizen…to tender to you a complimentary benefit, and for this purpose have already engaged the building. We propose in addition to the giving a full Gymnastic Exhibition to vary the entertainment with choice music, to the end that our efforts may prove a decided success.” In addition to Gardner, other signers include fellow photographer John Goldin, Lincoln’s friend and bodyguard Ward Hill Lamon, Ford’s Theatre stage manager Henry Clay Ford, Grant’s military secretary Ely S. Parker, Grant’s aide-de-camp P. T. Hudson, Mayor Richard Wallach, and future Secretary of the Navy William E. Chandler. In very good condition, with intersecting folds, dampstaining, and soiling. Starting Bid $200

424. Gale Halderman.

Original designer of the first Ford Mustang, who then shepherded his design into production. Three glossy 10 x 8 photos signed in black felt tip by Gale Halderman, with images includi ng: H al derman’s sketch of the 1964 Ford Mustang; the front of the Cougar, which later became the Mustang; and a bright red convertible Mustang below tree branches. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by a Gale Halderman Museum business card, signed in black ink. Starting Bid $200

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Haring ‘dolphin-rider’ sketch with handwritten gallery invitation from 1985

425. Keith Haring. Superb original felt tip sketch of a dolphin rider and ‘X’ man together accomplished by Haring on an off-white 6.25 x 3.25 sheet, signed and dated below, “K. Haring, 85.” On a separate sheet, Haring writes an invitation to his upcoming gallery exhibition: “Sat. Oct. 26, 12–7 PM, Tony Shafrazi Gallery, 163 Mercer Street, 925-8732.” In very good to fine condition, with soiling, light edge toning, and some offsetting to the ‘gallery invitation’ page from onetime contact with adjoining pages. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the original recipient, in part: “I was a student in NYC back then and I bumped into Keith Haring on Broadway near Houston street in 1985…He invited me to Tony Shafrazi opening party. So he wrote the information on my memo book… He remembered me at the opening and said Hello to me. My story and myself were in the Japanese TV show called ‘Ptakara Kanteidan’ aired in 2015 May 5th in Japan.” A superb pairing of impromptu street-signed Haring pieces. Starting Bid $500

427. David Hockney.

426. Joan Miro.

ALS in French, signed “Miro,” one page, 7.25 x 10.5, Gladstone letterhead, April 6, 1959. Letter to Nelson Fuqua in Chicago, in part (translated): “My dear friend, I am deeply touched by all you did for us in Chicago. I was quite distressed by this stay in America and overwhelmed by everything you did to keep the project in New York…Right now my wife and I are in Chicago. We look forward to seeing you in Paris in early June. Thank you again from the bottom of my heart.” In fine condition. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope addressed in Miro’s hand, incorporating his surname in the return address area. Accompanied by an export certificate from the French Ministry of Culture. Starting Bid $200

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Red-and-green ink signature, “David Hockney,” on an off-white 5.5 x 4.25 album page, with a collector’s notation indicating that it was signed at the National Theatre in London on December 1, [1987]. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

428. Painters. Three ALSs

by notable 19th century painters, including: Jean-Paul Laurens, Alfred Edward Chalon, and Edwin Henry Landseer. In overall fine condition. Starting Bid $200


Trio of Balzac stories signed by Pablo Picasso 429. Pablo Picasso. Uncommon signed book: Petite Collection Balzac: La Comedie du Diable, Aventures Administratives, Le Message. Geneva: Editions Albert Skira, 1948. Softcover, 5 x 7, 119 pages. Signed and inscribed in fountain pen by the publisher, “Pour monsieur Marcelin, avec mon amitié! Albert Skira, 31/10/48,” and artist, “Picasso.” Picasso provided the elegant line drawing of Balzac that graces the front cover of the volume. In fine condition, with a few small stains to the signed page. A desirable volume signed by one of the iconic artists of the 20th century, and by a publisher known for his work with the Surrealists. Starting Bid $300

Beautiful certified print of a Renoir work

431. Norman Rockwell. At-

tractive limited edition color 20.75 x 26.5 lithograph of a 1946 Norman Rockwell painting entitled ‘Charwomen in Theater,’ numbered 70/200, signed in the lower border in pencil by Rockwell. Archivally double-matted and framed to an overall size of 29.5 x 35.5. In fine condition, with a crease to the left of the signature. A favorite of Rockwell collectors, this painting appeared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post published on April 6, 1946. Starting Bid $200

432. Norman Rockwell.

430. Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Wonderful matte-finish 6 x

10.75 photographic print of an unidentified painting by Renoir showing two figures in a field, signed in the lower border black ink, “Renoir.” Lower border also bears official certification stamps in French signed by the mayor of Cagnes-sur-Mer, to authenticate Renoir’s signature, adding the date of January 10, 1911. Affixed to a 9 x 12 mount and in fine condition. Starting Bid $300

Felt tip signature, “Sincerely, Norman Rockwell,” on an offwhite 5.5 x 3.25 bookplate. In fine condition. A bold and well-centered example. Encapsulated in a PSA/ DNA authentication holder. Starting Bid $200

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Rockwell pays his reference photographer, Clemens Kalischer 433. Norman Rockwell. Personal check, 6.25 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Norman Rockwell, payable to acclaimed photojournalist and art photographer Clemens Kalischer for $650, January 2, 1959. Endorsed on the reverse in fountain pen by Kalischer. In fine condition. Kalischer met Rockwell in the 1950s when the former first settled in Stockbridge. Kalischer situated himself in a studio next door to Rockwell who soon hired him to take reference photographs for his illustrations. Encapsulated in a PSA/DNA authentication holder. Starting Bid $200

434. Auguste Rodin. Striking

vintage mattefinish 6.25 x 9 photo of Pierre Curillon’s 1908 sculpture ‘ The Filial Piety,’ showing an elderly father supported by his son, affixed to a 9.75 x 12.5 mount, signed and inscribed on the mount in black ink, “Pour solliciter, pour M’r Pierre Curillon, l’achat dele marbre, Aug. Rodin,” with Curillon signing on the opposite side and adding the work title: “Piete filiale.” In fine condition, with light silvering to the image. A beautiful photo signed by two brilliant French sculptors. Starting Bid $200

436. Andy Warhol. Uncommon glossy 8 x 10 photo of Warhol by Richard L. Schulman, vertically signed in the left margin in thick black felt tip. In very good condition, with creasing, heaviest to the lower half of the photo, a central vertical bend, and a tear to the bottom edge. Accompanied by the original Interview mailing envelope.Starting Bid $200 92 |

May 8, 2019 | ART, ARCHITECTURE, AND DESIGN

Triple-signed Warhol’s philosophy with an iconic sketch of “Campbell’s Tomato Soup”

435. Andy Warhol. Signed book: The Philosophy of Andy

Warhol (From A to B & Back Again). First edition. NY: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975. Hardcover with dust jacket, 5.75 x 8.5, 241 pages. Signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black felt tip, “To Martin, Andy Warhol,” with a full-page sketch of his iconic soup can, marked: “Campbell’s Tomato Soup.” Also initialed in the lower corner, “AW,” and signed again on the front of the dust jacket, “Andy.” In fine condition, with light dust jacket wear, and a small chip to the top edge of the signed page. Starting Bid $200


437. Andy Warhol. Uncommon 4 x 9 cardstock photo of Warhol with his eyes closed, signed in the lower border in orange pencil. In fine condition, with some fading, or adhesion trouble, to the signature. Accompanied by a postcard sent to subscribers of Interview Magazine bearing a stamped signature. Starting Bid $200

438. Andy Warhol. Vin-

tage fountain pen signature, “Andy Warhol,” on an off-white 5 x 3 card. Notation on the reverse dates the signature to September 1968. In very fine condition. Originally obtained in person by a New York autograph collector who collected from the 1950s through the 2000s. Starting Bid $200

On the MacMonnies “figure of Victory” for the Brooklyn Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Arch 439. Stanford White. Distinguished American architect

(1853–1906) who was a leading figure of the ‘Beaux Arts’ movement, best known for his opulent mansions and for the second Madison Square Garden. He was fatally shot and killed in the roof garden theatre of the Landmark by the husband of actress Evelyn Nesbit in retribution for a long-ago affair. TLS, two pages, 8 x 10.5, McKim, Mead & White letterhead, October 9, 1894. Letter to sculptor Frederick William MacMonnies, referencing the Victory in part: “As I heard that you have been quite ill and had gone to Italy, I thought it best not to bother you about the figure of Victory. We will not, under any circumstances, have you do anything but remodel the figure. If you will remodel the figure and ship the same on board the steamer, we will make arrangements about paying for the bronze, taking down the old figure and putting up the new one. The Commandant and the Board at West Point have agreed to postpone the inauguration of the monument until next May, but as of course they want to be very sure that they get this second figure right, they have made the request, which we have agreed to, that a small cast of a small study for the new figure be sent over here for them to see before the bronze is cast. Would it not be possible therefore, for you to make such a small study (as such you can have thrown up by a workman), cast and sent over here before the enlargement is made? I think if you will keep the figure as severe and architectural as the Naples Victory and have no more movement than that figure, it will be all right. The special thing which seems to bother the officers at West Point is the great curl of drapery which is on the present figure. I am awful sorry to trouble you with this, but I am sure that you would agree with me, if you were here, and of course, this monument is too important a one to have anything vitally wrong, and certainly the size of the present Victory is very harmful to it. I hope by this time, that you are all well and back at work again. Gibson has come back with lurid tales from Paris, and in fact, his illustrations brought strange recollections to my mind.” The text features several ink corrections made in White’s hand. In very good to fine condition, with intersecting folds, paperclip impressions, and creasing to the lower right area of both pages. This letter references the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Arch in Brooklyn, a monument dedicated to ‘The Defenders of the Union, 1861–1865.’ The impressive arch was designed by John H. Duncan and built over the course of three years from 1889 to 1892. When White’s architectural firm was hired to overhaul the plaza in 1893, they recommended that sculptural elements be added to the arch. They commissioned MacMonnies to create three bronze groups, the most spectacular being the ‘Quadriga’ on top, portraying the winged goddess of victory between two trumpeting winged attendants. Although the Arch had opened to the public in 1894, the final sculptures were not added until later in 1898. Starting Bid $200

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comic art & animation Stunning Mickey Mouse sketch drawn by Walt Disney 440. Walt Disney. Incredibly rare sketch of a

smiling Mickey Mouse, accomplished in pencil on an off-white 4.25 x 6.75 album page by Walt Disney, who has signed and inscribed below, “To Anne, with best wishes, Walt Disney.” The album page is part of a vintage leather-bound autograph album, 7 x 4.5, which also contains vintage ink signatures of Judy Garland and comedy duo Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. In fine condition. Consignor notes that the album originated in Ireland—the homeland of Disney’s father—and was likely signed by Disney during his 1946 trip there. The Laurel and Hardy signatures were likely obtained during their farewell show in 1952 in Dublin. Contrary to popular perception, Disney never completely animated a single Mickey Mouse cartoon, nor did he draw a single Mickey comic. He would on rare occasions offer a quickly constructed version of his iconic figure. As such, sketches of Mickey by Disney remain highly coveted and seldom encountered. Starting Bid $2500

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May 8, 2019 | COMIC ART AND ANIMATION


Crumb seeks a collection of 78s— “I’m only interested in the period of the 1920s & ‘30s, and mostly in jazz, blues & country music”

441. Robert Crumb. ALS signed “R. C.,” penned on the reverse of a 4.25 x 5.75 postcard, September 28, 2002. Written from Sauve, France, a letter to Utah artist and Highland High School art instructor Patrick Eddington, in part: “In your letter of August 15th you mentioned that a friend of yours has several thousand 78s and that he’d be willing to part with any that I might want! Would you be willing to look through them for me if I give you some sort of guidelines, make a pile of likely looking records and then call me from his place and read the names to me over the phone?? If so, here’s a rough idea of what I’m looking for—forget about listing name of artists—that would fill 50 pages—but for someone who has no knowledge, a list of the labels to look for is helpful. First of all, I’m only interested in the period of the 1920s & ‘30s, and mostly in jazz, blues & country music.” Crumb proceeds to list a variety of “Major labels of the period,” with examples like “Victor Black ‘Scroll’ label,” “Columbia (Black Label Only),” “Okeh (‘Electric’) Red or Black label (not later Purple label),” “Vocalion—Black, White & Gold ‘Scroll’ label (Not the later Blue label),” and “Brunswick—Black & Gold ‘Lightning’ label.” Crumb then requests “Any jazz, blues, or country music on these ‘off-brand’ labels: Perfect, Oriole, Conqueror, Melotone, Romeo, Banner or the more rare but often very good: Gennett, Champion, Supertone, Superior, Kerwin, Paramount (Black label only), Broadway.” In fine condition. Accompanied by the original hand-addressed mailing envelope, with Crumb incorporating his surname in the return address field. Starting Bid $200

Beautiful large sketch of Snoopy inside a volume of “Peanuts Classics”

442. Charles Schulz. Signed book: Peanuts Classics.

First edition. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970. Hardcover with dust jacket, 8.75 x 11.25. Signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black felt tip, “For Ami with every best wish—Charles M. Schulz,” with the fabulous addition of a large sketch of Snoopy perched atop his doghouse. In fine condition, with a gift inscription to the front pastedown and a price-clipped dust jacket. This large original drawing could easily be removed from the book and displayed as artwork. An excellent compilation of Peanuts comic strips boasting a desirable sketch of the beloved Snoopy. Starting Bid $200

443. Charles Schulz. Handsome

print of a 1986 Peanuts strip by Charles Schulz, 24 x 17, nicely signed in the first panel in blue ballpoint, “Best wishes, Charles M. Schulz.” The strip portrays Snoopy as a writer, with Lucy making suggestions for his work—’They don’t have enough romance. I’ve just been reading a very romantic book…The man says to the woman, ‘You are breath and bread and water to me.’ That’s the sort of thing you should write.’ The comic closes with Snoopy typing, ‘’You are breath and bread and water to me,’ he said. ‘And chocolate chip cookies.’’ In fine condition. A desirable print of a humorous Peanuts strip, signed by the renowned cartoonist. Starting Bid $200

444. Charles Schulz. Handsome semi-glossy 10 x 8 photo of Schulz posing with a large stuffed Snoopy, signed and inscribed in the lower border in black felt tip, “For Rev. James M, Harvey—Best wishes— Charles M. Schulz.” Reverse bears an H. Lee Hooper photographer’s stamp. In fine condition, with a few small creases. Starting Bid $200

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Starting Bid $200

445. Mel Blanc

446. Disney: Clarence Nash

448. Matt Groening

449. Matt Groening

451. Hank Ketcham Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

454. Stan Lee

455. Seth MacFarlane

456. Frederick Burr Opper

457. Trey Parker

459. Charles Schulz

460. Winnie the Pooh

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

458. Charles Schulz Starting Bid $200

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447. Rube Goldberg Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

453. Stan Lee

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


literature

“We are dealing with Celtic magic, here. We are dealing with very strange things” 461. Philip K. Dick. TLS signed “Love, Phil” with added heart

and arrow,” five pages, 8.5 x 11, January 10, 1981. In-depth letter to science fiction author Patricia Warrick, in part: “I am watching 2001 on my SelecTV and I am taking a break to write to you again…When I saw the golden fish sign in February 1974 I realized something. I don’t know what it was I realized; for some reason it did not then or since take place in words (i.e. ‘Hey, I realize that—’ etc.). In October of last year while I was making notes on my exegesis I wrote the following…” Dick quotes a long passage related to the “perception/awareness of essence identity” with a specific commonality between “USA 1974” and “Rome AD 45.” He continues: “My brain performed a meta-abstraction that is to normal thinking as ‘two plus two equals four’ is to ‘two cows plus two cows equals four cows,’ as I said in yesterday’s letter. But what, specifically, did my brain do? What was the mental operation involved…Was my October 1980 analysis correct? Was it complete? Is there more that can be said?” Dick expounds on the enormity of the effect on his brain, refers to a Gnostic term called “heimarmene,” and explains how the job of Christ was to break “the rule of…ancient planetary powers,” which he describes as “all powers in the universe less than God.” He notes that the “real mission of Christ [was] to break their rule and set up his own rule in their place. The new law is one of agape and is based on the idea that the einai (esse, Sein, nature) of God is love (agape) and not noein (pure intelligence) as had been supposed.” After further thoughts on anamnesis and the golden fish episode, Dick refers back to a March 1974 experience: “But above all that pertains to March 1974 was my seeing Valis. What is Valis? The Cosmic Christ? I saw the body, the blood and the wound (as I said previously); I even saw the iron spear tip in the wound, and it is the Black Iron Prison. This is why I drew so much on Wagner’s Parsifal in VALIS. I now (as of this month) know a lot more about Wagner’s Celtic sources for Parsifal; I now know, but did not previously know, about the Fisher King who has the wound through both his thighs. It has to do with the Holy Grail. And, in turn, the Holy Grail has to do with Merlin. Merlin, according to my sources, was ‘the prophet of the Grail.’ We are dealing with Celtic magic, here. We are dealing with very strange things. The Grail contains the Host. And the Host is able to communicate verbally, as I say in VALIS. What is it, then? An information–processing entity very advanced and sophisticated? It sounds like the Torah ( Ideal with this in the sequel to VALIS, the Torah as a computer of some kind. The trouble with all this is that when you say it you indict yourself as a palpable madman.” In fine condition. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope. Starting Bid $200

462. Charles Dickens. Large ink signature, “Faithfully yours, Charles Dickens,

Tremont House, Boston, Second February, 1842,” on an off-white 4.75 x 7.25 sheet. In very good condition, with creasing, scattered light toning, and short splits to the ends of the intersecting folds. Dickens stayed at Tremont House in Boston from January 22 through February 5, which marked the beginning of his very first American tour. As word spread of the internationally renowned author’s presence, the city buzzed with excitement: masses of enlivened fans grew anxious to greet him; publishers scrambled to reprint editions of his work; newspapers lauded his masterful writing; and enterprising locals produced commemorative trinkets and decorations to capitalize on the occasion. Doubtlessly obtained by one of his many Boston-area admirers, this desirable autograph represents Dickens’s personal introduction to America. Starting Bid $200

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463. Charles Dickens. De-

sirable hand-addressed mailing envelope, 4.75 x 2.75, addressed by Dickens to “Miss Procter, 32 Weymouth Street, Portland Place, London, W.,” and neatly signed in the lower left, “Charles Dickens.” Postmarked at Rochester, January 29, 1866. Includes an original 2.5 x 4 carte-de-visite portrait of Dickens by J. & C. Watkins, published by Mason and Co. of London. In fine condition. Starting Bid $200

“There is plenty of room for all our troubles in God’s great Out-of-Doors”

464. Paul Laurence Dunbar. African-American poet (1872-

1906), known for his colorful use of language and dialect, who died of tuberculosis at the age of 33. AQS on an off-white 3 x 2 card, signed at the conclusion in ink, “Paul Laurence Dunbar.” Dunbar pens a proverb, in full: “There is plenty of room for all our troubles in God’s great Out-of-Doors.” In fine condition, with a light paperclip impression to the bottom edge. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | LITERATURE

465. T. S. Eliot. Vin-

tage matte-finish 2 x 2.75 passport photo of the great writer, signed at the top in fountain pen, “T. S. Eliot.” In fine condition, with a light paperclip impression to the top edge which extends on to Eliot’s forehead. Accompanied by a transmittal letter from his secretary dated May 9, 1956, and the original mailing envelope. Starting Bid $200

“I personally regard your assignment as the most important politically of any of our correspondents” 466. Ian Fleming.

TLS signed “Yours sincerely, Ian Fleming,” one page, 8 x 10, Kemsley House letterhead, September 17, 1951. Letter to journalist and spy Antony Terry of the British Press Centre, in full: “Congratulations on your fine showing in ‘The Sunday Times’ yesterday, but I still note the absence of the first person singular! However, your page 5 lead was excellently put together and reasoned and I hope you will be encouraged by our anxiety to have a strong voice in Germany. I personally regard your assignment as the most important politically of any of our correspondents, with the possible exception of Richard Hughes, and I want you to make your service to ‘The Sunday Times’ your first priority. This has been explained to Iain Lang, Forsyth Munro, etc., and any requests towards the weekend which interfere with this priority should be turned down or passed on perhaps to Peck. I hope you had a fine holiday and that your shoulders now feel strong enough to assume the mantle which I am intent on thrusting upon them.” Fleming handwrites the salutation, “Dear Antony Terry.” In very good to fine condition, with an extra horizontal fold, and two file holes to the left edge. Starting Bid $200


Flaubert expects censorship for his forthcoming play, The Weaker Sex 467. Gustave Flaubert. ALS in French, signed “Gu. Flaubert,” two pages, 5 x 8, no date. Letter to a friend, in full (translated): “Le Sexe Faible [The Weak Sex] must have been taken to the censors today. Weinschenk worries about the minister, but if you cut the word minister, the role no longer exists and the piece becomes incomprehensible. The general can be a Swiss general (Swiss—oh, very well!), but minister cannot be modified… you have to take it or leave it. Write your father what you think is appropriate. You know the question as well as I do. Your interest is at stake more than mine. If your father and Beauplan support us (and they can support us, since the censors depend only on them and on any one thing that they say about it), we are saved. If they don’t, then not. In a last-ditch effort I am writing one more time to d’Osmoy! And I will notify R. Duval to speak to his cousin Chabaud-Latour. More I cannot do. I know perfectly well that Weinschenk counts on a big monetary success. Le Sexe Faible is his last challenge, and he will do anything I want. But still, if the minister is left out, good night! I am not trying to conceal that I am full of bitterness and that I am getting to the point where I have had enough, or even too much! It probably would not be bad if you did the trip to Paris, (Sunday). It’s worth it. As for the rest, it’s up to you. I suspect your father will not answer you, an easy way to avoid difficult steps, and that Le Sexe Faible will be stopped by the censorship, but they will regret it.” In very good to fine condition, with professional repairs and backing to the second page. Le Sexe Faible, or The Weaker Sex, was a dramatic comedy originally written by Louis Boulihet, a playwright and one of Flaubert’s closest friends who died in 1869. After discovering the incomplete manuscript amongst Bouilhet’s papers, Flaubert opted to finish The Weaker Sex—that being men—as a tribute to his late friend in 1872-73, doing so somewhat rapidly as he was also under pressure to produce his own 1874 work, The Candidate, which turned out to be a resounding flop. Flaubert was no stranger to the looming threat of censorship; his masterwork debut novel Madame Bovary was attacked by public prosecutors for obscenity following its serialization in 1856, with Flaubert’s inevitable acquittal the following year adding greatly to the work’s notoriety and subsequent book sales. In a letter addressed to George Sand on September 5, 1873, Flaubert remarks: ‘As I have in the le Sexe faible a rather ridiculous general, I am not without forebodings. What a fine thing is Censorship! Axiom: All governments curse literature, power does not like another power.’ Starting Bid $300

468. Robert Frost.

Vintage glossy 6.5 x 8.25 photo of Frost in a suit and tie, signed and inscribed in fountain pen, “To the Ken Brownes, away out there, from their friend, Robert Frost, away back here in N.E.” Reverse bears a typed collector’s notation indicating that it was received in 1950. In very good condition, with homemade deckle-edges, overall creasing, and crazing to the emulsion. Starting Bid $200

469. Ernest Hemingway.

Unsigned first edition book: For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest H e m i n g w a y. First edition. N Y: C h a r l e s Scribner’s Sons, 1940. Hardcover with dust jacket, 6 x 8.5, 471 pages. Book condition: VG/VG, with some unobtrusive stains to the textblock fore-edge and minor edgewear to dust jacket. A great first edition example of what is considered one of Hemingway’s finest works. Starting Bid $200

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Sumptuous signed excerpt from Finnegans Wake

471. James Joyce. Signed book: Haveth Childers Everywhere. First edition, limited issue, numbered 67/100. Paris, Henry Babou & Jack Kahane; New York, the Fountain Press, 1930. Softcover with glassine jacket and slipcase, 7.5 x 11.25, 73 pages. Signed on the colophon in pencil, “James Joyce.” This gorgeous example is one of 100 copies printed on Imperial hand made iridescent Japan paper and signed by the author. Autographic condition: fine. Book condition: NF/VG- in a G slipcase, with a bookplate evidently removed from inside the front cover, a large tear to the front of the glassine jacket, and separations to edges of the slipcase (with the bottom panel present but completely detached); the book itself is exceptionally well-preserved, and it is a highly appealing volume of the highest quality. Haveth Childers Everywhere, a fragment from ‘Work In Progress,’ consists of what became the final part of Chapter 3, Book III of Finnegans Wake, James Joyce’s renowned experimental epic. A gorgeous signed edition from the master modernist. Starting Bid $500

470. Victor Hugo. ALS in French, one page, 4.5 x 7, July 17, 1867. Written while in banishment, living on the island of Guernsey, Hugo writes to Aubin Pelletier, authorizing “a young talent” to publish in Pelletier’s magazine the poems “Vieille Chanson du Jeune temps” and “Saison des Semailles, Le Soir.” In very good condition, with irregular staining, old tape stains, and some splitting to the intersecting folds. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | LITERATURE

472. Jack Kerouac. Personal check, 6.25 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Kerouac, “Jack Kerouac,” payable to Macy’s for $26.31, June 4, 1958. In fine condition, with cancellation ink touching the first letter of his surname. Having released On the Road a year earlier, Kerouac would publish The Subterraneans and The Dharma Bums in 1958. A desirable check from the Beat Generation icon. Starting Bid $200


473. A. A. Milne. Archive containing one letter signed by A. A. Milne, plus 21 letters written and signed by his wife Daphne, all sent to their friends Vincent and Barbara Seligman. The author’s LS is signed “A. A. Milne,” one page, 5.5 x 7.5, Mallord Street letterhead, December 11, [no year], in full: “I have already told the management that your mother wanted to try two stalls, an that they were to be in the first or second row. Daff had arranged with her to do this some time ago. So I hope that she has heard from the theatre by now.” A. A. Milne adds a short postscript, “You must come to dine afterward.” The balance of the letters, though undated, follow the lives of the Milne family from about 1920 through the purchase of their home in the country in 1924. Some of the revealing comments in Daphne’s letters include: “Blue [A. A. Milne’s nickname] has got one of his literary society dinners. Will you come and console me?”; “We are beginning to get excited over ‘The Dover Road’ [a 1922 Milne play] & the cast is now practically complete”; “I am so glad you are seeing the Punch verses. Aren’t the Shepard drawings adorable & so exactly right”; “Alan is at this moment deep (and with very rumpled hair) in a poem he is writing for the Star for Christmas eve”; and “Moon [Christopher Robin’s nickname] has gone to his boarding school & we are feeling extremely quiet!” In overall fine condition. The Milnes would come to develop a long-term friendship with Vincent and Barbara Seligman that would last over thirty years. Like A. A. Milne, Vincent Seligman was a writer, and he dedicated his 1923 book Oxford Oddities to Milne. Starting Bid $200

Very rare Potter sketch of “Peter Rabbit,” sent to a composer friend for Christmas

474. Beatrix Potter. Sought-after ink signature and inscription, “Wm. and Beatrix Heelis, Christopher and Phyllis Le Fleming and the young man, from Peter Rabbit, Christmas 1936,” on an offwhite 4.25 x 6 presentation sheet, with Potter adding a wonderful small sketch of a rabbit and a trail of winding “x” marks. In fine condition, with trimmed edges and scattered light foxing. With their playful plots, imaginative critters, and some of the liveliest illustrations in children’s literature, Beatrix Potter’s little books—23 in total, published over the course of two decades— were an instant and enormous success. By 1935, the 69-year-old had all but given up her writing career, focusing on her farming and sheep breeding above all else. But despite her weakening eyes and a tremble in her hand, she cheerfully embarked on a new project called The Peter Rabbit Music Books when the young composer Christopher Le Fleming—‘a rather peculiar visitor,’ as she called him in a letter to a friend—approached her with a set of piano pieces he had written, inspired by her stories and suitable for children. A wonderful association piece made all the more desirable by the extremely rare presence of an original Potter sketch. Starting Bid $500 www.RRAuction.com | 101


475. Mary Shelley. British au-

thor (1797–1851) whose first and best-known novel, Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus, takes a place among the most enduring classics of the horror genre. Ink signature, “Yours truly, M. Shelley, 24 South Audley, 28 July 1837,” on an off-white 4 x 1.25 slip. Attractively matted with a portrait to an overall size of 9.75 x 13. In fine condition, with some light soiling. Shelley lived at London’s 24 South Audley Street only briefly, from March to October 1837. Earlier in the year she had published her final novel, Falkner, which was likely an attempt to resolve her complicated relationship with her father. A scarce and desirable literary autograph. Starting Bid $200

Thompson’s first take on the Hell’s Angels

476. Hunter S. Thompson: Issue of ‘The Nation’. Rare original issue of The Nation from May 17, 1965, Vol. 200, No.

20, 30 pages, 8.5 x 10.75, with front cover showing motorcycle artwork next to bold text promoting “The Motorcycle Gangs,” an article written by gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson. The five-page article, “The Motorcycle Gangs: Losers and Outsiders,” begins on page 522 and reads, in part: “Last Labor Day weekend newspapers all over California gave front-page reports of a heinous gang rape in the moonlit sand dunes near the town of Seaside on the Monterey Peninsula. Two girls, aged 14 and 15, were allegedly taken from their dates by a gang of filthy, frenzied, boozed-up motorcycle hoodlums called ‘Hell’s Angels,’ and dragged off to be ‘repeatedly assaulted.’” In fine condition, with expected light age toning. Having recently quit the National Observer, a 27-year-old Thompson accepted Nation editor Carey McWilliams’s $100 offer to write an article on the subject of motorcycle gangs. The article, published about a month later, prompted book offers from several publishers interested in the topic. In preparation for his soon-to-be best-selling Hell’s Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs, Thompson spent a year in close proximity with Hell’s Angels from the San Francisco and Oakland chapters, earning their trust and unique comradery before ultimately being pummeled and forced out for their company after openly opining against spousal abuse. A decidedly rare publication responsible for jump-starting the career of one of America’s most notorious reporters. Starting Bid $200

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May 8, 2019 | LITERATURE


Turgenev laments his failure as a dramatist, confessing: “I didn’t possess the stuff of the dramatic poet” 477. Ivan Turgenev. Highly influential Russian author (1818–1883) whose 1862 novel Fathers and Sons remains one of the pillars of nineteenth-century literature. ALS in German, signed “Iwan Turgenjew,” one page both sides, 5.25 x 8.25, personal letterhead, February 2, 1878. Letter to “Miss Paoli,” in full (translated): “I hasten to reply to your kind letter. In fact, from the very beginning of my career as an author I wrote plays (the last one in 1851), but I very soon became convinced that I didn?’t possess the stuff of the dramatic poet, for only the evolution of the characters interested me, not their conflicts. Moreover my pieces have met with no success. But as you have shown a friendly interest in my affairs, I allow myself to send you my Scenes of Russian Life, in which you will find two plays—a comedy in two acts and one in one act. The last one is not even planned for the stage. You will most likely share my opinion about my dramatic skills. I was very pleased to hear from you again; I hope that you are doing well and asks you to receive the assurance of my highest esteem.” In fine condition, with the paper a bit thin along the left edge where a mounting strip was apparently once removed. A remarkable autobiographical reflection on his career as a writer. Starting Bid $1000

Classic signed portrait of “Walt Whitman, born May 31, 1819” 478. Walt Whitman. Highly sought-after 4 x 5.25 cabinet-style photo of Whitman wearing a hat with his beard gently resting in an open hand, boldly signed in ink, “Walt Whitman, born May 31, 1819.” This portrait was originally captured in Brooklyn in September 1872 by G. F. E. Pearsall, and it was used as the frontispiece for his 1876 book Two Rivulets. In very good condition, with trimmed edges, rounded corners, and a tack hole and scuff to the top edge. Starting Bid $300

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479. Maya Angelou

480. Maya Angelou

481. Isaac Asimov

482. Samuel Beckett

483. Cao Yu

484. Karel Capek

485. Truman Capote Starting Bid $200

486. Francois Rene de Chateaubriand

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

487. Jean Cocteau

488. Roald Dahl

489. Theodore Dreiser

490. Ilya Ehrenburg

491. Charles G. Finney

492. Elizabeth Gaskell

493. William Goldman

494. Gunter Grass

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

104 | May 8, 2019 | LITERATURE

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


495. Alex Haley

496. Han Suyin

497. John Hersey

498. Hermann Hesse

499. Johann Kaspar Lavater

500. Lin Yutang

501. Dhan Gopal Mukerji

Starting Bid $200

503. J. K. Rowling Starting Bid $200

504. Antoine de Saint-ExupĂŠry

505. Carl Sandburg

506. Maurice Sendak

507. Dr. Seuss

508. Shel Silverstein

509. John Steinbeck

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

502. Amos Oz

Starting Bid $200

510. Algernon Swinburne

Starting Bid $200

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music

A tender “Sonatina” from the Italian master

Brilliant musical manuscript for Gretchaninov’s “miniatures”

511. Ferruccio Busoni.

Uncommon AMQS on an off-white 6.25 x 9 sheet, signed and inscribed in Italian in bold fountain pen (translated), “To Ms. Emma Mettler, in remembrance of a colleague, of her devotion, Ferruccio Busoni, Rome 9 April 1912.” Busoni neatly pens three staves of music from an unidentified “Sonatina,” with Busoni adding both tempo and temperament, “Andantino” and “dolce.” In fine condition, with light toning along the edges. Starting Bid $200

512. Maria Callas. Glossy 5.75 x

4.25 photo of soprano Maria Callas, operatic tenor Mario Del Monaco, and mezzo-soprano Giulietta Simionato prior to rehearsals for the two-act opera Norma at the La Scala opera house in 1955, signed in black felt tip, “Maria Callas, 1976” and “Mario Del Monaco,” and in blue fountain pen, “Giulietta Simionato.” Reverse bears a copyright stamp. In fine condition, with a crease to the upper right corner. Starting Bid $200

514. Alexander Gretchaninov.

Russian Romantic composer (1864– 1956) who worked during a transitional era in the history of Russian music. Desirable autograph musical manuscript, comprising four musically-lined pages on adjoining 10.5 x 13.75 sheets, signed and titled on the front, “A. Gretchaninoff, op. 145, L’miniatures pour Flute et Piano.” The fabulous manuscript consists of two parts, labeled “Souvenir de l’ami lointain” and “Au Foyer.” The lower margins bear red ink stamps of French music publisher Alphonse Leduc. Includes the 10.75 x 13.75 title page of the Leduc-published piece, initialed in the upper left corner in ink by Gretchaninoff with his approval to print. In very good to fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Debussy requests scores for ‘Afternoon of a Faun’

513. Claude Debussy. ALS in French, one page, 5 x 5.25, no date. Letter to

“Mr. Demats,” in part (translated): “Can you please try and send to me the two scores of ‘l’apres-midi d’un faune’ [Afternoon of a Faun]? I need them very urgently and I’m very worried to know in which hands they are now.” In fine condition. Debussy’s symphonic poem ‘Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune’ [Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun], one of his most famous works, would provide the basis for the Nijinsky ballet Afternoon of a Faun. A beautiful, boldly penned letter concerning an important work. Starting Bid $300

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May 8, 2019 | MUSIC


515. Franz Liszt. Scarce untranslated ANS in German, signed “F. Lz.,” one page on the reverse of a 4.25 x 2.75 visiting card marked “F. Liszt,” no date. In very fine condition. Starting Bid $300

Rare score for La Boheme, dedicated by Puccini to Monte-Carlo’s ‘Mimi’ 516. Giacomo Puccini. Signed

book: La Boheme. Later printing. Milan: G. Ricordi & Co., 1898. Hardcover, 8 x 11, 277 pag es. Si gned and inscribed on his portrait in bold black ink, “A la grande artiste Marthe Regnier, ricordere, Puccini, 17.6.10.” In very good to fine condition, with damage to the covers, including a cracked and detached corner of the back cover; interior pages, including the signed page, are all clean and fine. Accompanied by Marthe Regnier’s pass for a rehearsal of La Boheme at the Theatre de Monte Carlo on January 23, 1911. A noted French actress and singer, Marthe Regnier played the role of Mimi in La Boheme several times throughout the decade, and Puccini no doubt attended one or more of these performances. The newspaper Le Littoral of Monaco published a review of the show on January 31, 1911, commenting on Madame Regnier’s starring role (translated): ‘Madame Marthe Regnier, whose immense success of lyric debut at the Monte-Carlo Theater we have already said, will again play the role of Mimi, whom she personifies in an absolutely unmistakable note of truth. The great artist has already seduced the public by the flame and velvety of her voice, and her triumph has been unanimously noted by the press; no doubt she does not find, tonight, the same enthusiastic welcome.’ Starting Bid $300

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517. Sergei Rachmaninoff.

Attractive Ibbs & Tillett analytical program entitled “Recital by Rachmaninoff,” eight pages, 5.75 x 9, signed on the front cover in fountain pen, “S. Rachmaninoff.” In very good to fine condition, with light soiling and handling wear. Starting Bid $200

Exquisite Ravel portrait presented to his editor

519. Bedrich Smetana. Distin-

guished Czech composer (1824–1884) best known for his colorful symphonic poem The Moldau and the opera The Bartered Bride. Fountain pen signature, “B. Smetana, Liszt,” on the front cover of a 9.5 x 12.25 sheet music booklet neatly and fully arranged in another hand. Although incapable of determining, the manner of signature and title indicates that the booklet was likely owned by Smetana. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light soiling to the front cover. Starting Bid $200

520. Henriette Sontag.

German operatic soprano of great international renown (1806–1854). AMQS on an off-white 7 x 4.25 sheet, signed and dated below in ink, “Henriette Rossi Sontag, Boston, 17th December, 1853.” Sontag pens two lines from an unidentified work, written six months before her death in Mexico City. In fine condition, with scattered light foxing. Starting Bid $200

521. Miles Davis Quintet. Drink

518. Maurice Ravel. Vintage matte-finish 4 x 5.5 portrait of Ravel in a bust-length pose by J. Hery, affixed to the original 6.76 x 9 studio mount, signed and inscribed on the mount in bold ink to his editor, “A mon cher éditeur et ami, E. Demets, bien cordialement, Maurice Ravel.” In very good to fine condition, with toning and soiling to the mount, and light silvering to the perimeter of the portrait. One of the most prestigious music publishers in early 20th-century Paris, Eugene Demets worked with a number of well known modern composers, including Maurice Ravel, Erik Satie, and Joaquin Turina. Demets published Ravel’s Pavane pour une infante défunte in 1900, Jeux d’eau in 1902, and Miroirs in 1906. Starting Bid $300

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card indicating “$3.00 Per Person Minimum Per Show” from The Jazz Gallery at 80 St. Marks Place in New York City, measuring 4 x 7 open, signed inside in blue ballpoint, “Miles Davis, thank you,” “J. J. Johnson,” and “Hank Mobley,” and on the reverse, “Best, Paul Chambers” and “Philly Joe Jones.” In very good to fine condition, with light overall toning and a single tack hole. A desirable combination of jazz greats. Starting Bid $200


Birdland brochure signed by jazz legends Miles Davis and Max Roach 522. Miles Davis and Max Roach. Fantastic

vintage flyer for the Birdland jazz club at 1678 Broadway in New York City, 8.5 x 3.75, signed on the reverse in blue ballpoint, “Miles Davis, thank you” and “Thank you, Max Roach.” Inside, the pamphlet depicts several of the iconic club’s regular acts and patrons, including Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, Marlon Brando, Harry Belafonte, Dinah Washington, Duke Ellington, Stan Kenton, Paul Whiteman, Sammy Davis, Jr., Gary Cooper, Benny Goodman, and Henny Youngman. In fine condition, with some faint staining. Starting Bid $200

Ellington’s handwritten score for a standard— “Right to Sing Blues”

523. Duke Ellington. Handwritten musical manuscript in

pencil by Duke Ellington, unsigned, one page both sides, 9.5 x 12.5, headed, “(at Club)—Right to Sing Blues.” Ellington transcribes passages of this jazz and blues standard, originally composed as ‘I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues’ by Harold Arlen in 1932, to be played by his band members Harry Carney (baritone saxophone), Lawrence Brown (trombone), and Cootie Williams (trumpet), noting “ad lib” for solos at the end. In very good to fine condition, with intersecting folds, edge creasing, and overall light brushing to the pencil. Most of Ellington’s scores are housed in the Smithsonian Institution, making any page in private hands quite scarce. Starting Bid $200

Rarely offered musical quote from Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue

524. George Gershwin. Brilliant AMQS on a beige-

colored 6 x 4.5 album page, signed boldly in fountain pen, “Good wishes, George Gershwin, Feb. 20, 1932,” who below has added five bars of crisply penned music from his masterwork Rhapsody in Blue. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light toning and soiling. A delightfully bold union of signature and musical quote from his most famous composition—Rhapsody in Blue remains quite elusive in such a desirable signed format, with our last example having appeared some four years prior. Starting Bid $300

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The Fab Four record at the BBC Playhouse Theatre in 1963 525. Beatles. Vintage 1960s autograph book, 5.5 x 3.5, signed inside on the same page in red ballpoint, “Paul McCartney (Beatles),” and in blue ballpoint, “George Harrison,” “John Lennon,” and “Ringo Starr, xxx.” Collector’s notations date the signatures to July 17, 1963. In fine condition, with all of the interior pages detached but present. The autographs were obtained at the BBC Playhouse Theatre in London on July 17, 1963, when the Beatles were on hand to record for the Sunday morning BBC radio program ‘Easy Beat,’ which was transmitted on July 21, 1963. The group performed four songs on the show ‘I Saw Her Standing There,’ ‘A Shot of Rhythm and Blues,’ ‘There’s a Place,’ and ‘Twist and Shout.’ Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $1000

526. Beatles. Visually appealing circa 1963 off-white 3.25 x 6 sheet

signed in blue ink, “Love, Paul McCartney,” in red ballpoint, “George Harrison,” in blue ballpoint, “Ringo Starr, xxx” and “John Lennon, xxx, Beatles.” The upper portion of the sheet is affixed to a pink album page. In fine condition, with a central horizontal fold. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks and a letter of authenticity from noted Beatles expert Frank Caiazzo, which reads: “To have John writing ‘Beatles’ is incredibly scarce and extremely desirable, as he was the last member of the band to designate their name on an autograph set and rarely did he do so. The autographs on this page date from early 1963 and this is a stunning example from the period.” Starting Bid $1000

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Choice Beatles photo signed by all four 527. Beatles. Vintage glossy 7.25 x 5.5 full-length publicity photo of the Beatles in their distinctive matching gray collarless suits, signed on the reverse in fountain pen, “Love, Paul McCartney, xxx” and “Love, John Lennon, xxx,” and in black ballpoint, “George Harrison” and “Ringo Starr, xxx.” Archivally double-matted and framed with an image of the front of the signed photo to an overall size of 14.5 x 19.5; backing of frame has a window for viewing front of photo. In fine condition, with a slight crease beneath Harrison’s last name, and some ink spattering on the image side between Lennon and McCartney. A superb set of clean signatures from the Fab Four. Starting Bid $1000

Harrison writes to one of his favorite comedic actors—“Thanks for your letter about the farting” 528. Beatles: George Harrison. ALS, one page, 7 x 9, 26 Cadogan

Square letterhead, no date, but circa late 1970s. Letter to British actor Ken Kitson, in full: “Thanks for your letter about the farting—it was funny to hear from you! I’m sorry to say that Handmade is not going ahead with financing at the moment—to tell you the truth we are looking to use other people’s money as well! It is or can be very difficult and we have had our ups & downs, to say the least! Well sorry Pal—but best of luck with your project. If Handmade suddenly makes millions I’ll try to remember you— till then all the best and love and best wishes to Vera!” In fine condition. Includes is a handwritten provenance letter from Kitson, which reads: “Here is a letter to say how the letter from George Harrison came about. I worked with Michael Palin [Monty Python] on ‘Ripping Yarns’ and later on two other programmes. It turned out that George along with Joe Brown were two of my biggest fans according to Michael. Which I thought was great, but then George Harrison wrote this letter to me on his private notepaper. I also enclose a little note from Michael Palin.” The ANS from Palin, on The Gumby Corporation stationery, reads: “Good luck! I’m sure that I’ve told you that Joe Brown and George Harrison knew all the lines from Golden Gordon aft my heart—but their favourite of all was ‘Fartings stopped’—love and good wishes, Michael.”

Harrison’s mention of “Handmade” refers to HandMade Films, a film production and distribution company formed by Harrison and business partner Denis O’Brien in 1978 to finance the Monty Python film Life of Brian. Although the company was purchased in 2010, HandMade was responsible delivering to the public a variety successful and enduring titles, including: Terry Gilliam’s 1981 fantasy Time Bandits, the 1981 fan-favorite slasher The Burning, the 1987 cult classic Withnail and I, Guy Ritchie’s 1998 crime caper Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, and Danny Boyle’s 2010 survival story 127 Hours. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $300 www.RRAuction.com | 111


Airline menu signed by John and George in 1966 529. Beatles: Lennon and Harrison.

Highly sought-after Qantas Airlines menu, four pages, 7 x 8, signed inside in blue ballpoint by George Harrison and John Lennon. Original owner of the menu has affixed clipped images of the Beatles to reverse of signed page. In fine condition, with some light soiling to the front cover. Consignor notes that these signatures date to circa 1966. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the previous owner and a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $300

530. Beatles: McCartney and Starr. UK first pressing album of With the Beatles, signed boldly on the front cover in black felt tip, “Paul McCartney,” and signed and inscribed on the back cover in black ink, “To Ray, Best wishes, Ringo Starr.” In very good to fine condition, with some light soiling and toning, and minor lifting to the emulsion on the front. The record is included. Consignor notes that the signatures were obtained on the set of Paul McCartney’s 1984 film Give My Regards to Broad Street. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $200

McCartney offers up his St. John’s Wood garage to a group of stranded fans 531. Beatles: Paul McCartney. Vintage color glossy 9.75 x 9.75 photo of Paul

McCartney standing next to a Beatles fan at the backdoor of his St. John’s Wood home, signed and inscribed in black ballpoint, “To Carol, Love, Paul McCartney.” In very good condition, with moderately heavy overall creasing and two short edge tears. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks and an amusing provenance letter from the original recipient, which reads, in part: “The photo was taken in 1966. A group of us used to go the recording studio at Abbey road, most evenings and weekends after work. This particular Saturday, we went to studios, but the Beatles were not there. So we walked round to Paul’s house at St. Johns Wood. We hung around hoping to catch him, or any of the others till later, and we were sure he was in, so we rang the bell on the big gates. Eventually he came out, slightly cross, and told us to ‘go home girls.’ Well, of course we didn’t, and we missed our last train home!! So we rang again and he eventually came out again, and we explained our problem, and after a while he said we could sleep in his garage. He had a kettle etc. in there so we could have a drink. The photo was taken early the next morning outside his back door. I think, because he was so used to seeing us all, was maybe why he let us stay.” Starting Bid $200

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534. Eric Clapton.

532. Beatles: McCartney and Starr. Vintage glossy

5.75 x 7.75 Starpics promotional photo of the Beatles wearing matching suits and posing with their instruments, signed in blue ballpoint by Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. In fine condition. Encapsulated in a plastic Beckett authentication holder. Starting Bid $200

Bowie heads to America for the Diamond Dogs Tour in ‘74

DS, one page, 8 x 9, October 27, 1972. Official letter from Eric Clapton to Constellation Overseas Ltd., in full: “In connection with the payment due to me from overseas earnings presently amounting to £141,250, I shall be glad if you will accept this letter as my authority to pay such sum on my behalf to the Account of Dalby Limited, care of 1, Prospect Hill, Douglas, Isle of Man. Would you please hand a Banker’s Draft for the above amount made payable to a Dalby Limited to my accredited representative and bearer of this letter, Mr. D. L. Shaw.” Signed at the conclusion in blue ballpoint by Clapton. In fine condition, with two file holes to the left edge, and rusty staple holes to the upper left corner. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $200

533. David Bowie. TLS

signed “Bowie, x,” one page, 8.25 x 11.75, personal letterhead, no date but postmarked June 25, 1974. Letter to Michael Harris, in part: “Please forgive the time it has taken for me to answer, but I am sending this to you on the eve of the American Tour, the Show is going to be wonderful, I hope to be able to bring it to England and Europe for you all to see in December. We shall start this American Tour in Montreal on June 14th and finish at Madison Square Gardens in New York on July 20th. I hope you will all be thinking of us, because we can’t wait to get home and play for you.” In very good condition, with overall creasing and several horizontal folds. Accompanied by the original mailing envelope. Starting Bid $200

535. Cream. Vintage ballpoint signatures, “Eric Clapton,” “Ginger Baker,” and “Jack Bruce,” on a peach-colored 5.75 x 4.25 sheet. In very good to fine condition, with scattered light creasing and intersecting folds. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the original recipient, which reads, in part: “I got the Cream autographs on the 25 November 1966, when they played a gig at the California Ballroom in Dunstable. They played 2 sets, and I managed to meet them during the break.” Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $200

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Dylan pens the complete lyrics to “The Times They Are-a-Changin’” 536. Bob Dylan. Amazing and exceedingly rare handwritten lyrics by Bob Dylan for his iconic political anthem, “The Times They Are-a-Changin’,” one page, 8.5 x 11, written in black ballpoint and neatly signed at the conclusion, “Bob Dylan.” In very fine condition. The consignor notes that this was originally purchased directly from Dylan’s manager, Jeff Rosen. The classic lyrics read, in full: “Come gather around people wherever you roam And admit that the waters around you have grown And accept it that soon you’ll be drenched to the bone If your time to you is worth saving Then you better start swimming or you’ll sink like a stone For the times they are-a-changin’ Come writers and critics who prophesize with your pen And keep your eyes wide the chance won’t come again And don’t speak too soon for the wheel’s still in spin And there’s no telling who that it’s naming For the loser now will be later to win For the times they are-a-changin’ Come senators congressmen please heed the call Don’t stand in the doorway don’t block up the hall He that gets hurt will be he who has stalled There’s a battle outside and it’s raging It’ll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls For the times they are-a-changin’ Come mothers and fathers throughout the land And don’t criticize what you can’t understand Your sons and your daughters are beyond your command

Your old road is rapidly aging Get out of the new one if you can’t lend a hand For the times they are-a-changin’ The line it is drawn and the curse it is cast The slow one now will later be fast As the present now will later be past The order is rapidly fading And the first one now will later be last For the times they are-a-changing.” Considered one of the greatest songs ever written, these powerful lyrics have transcended the political turbulence of the 1960s that gave birth to them to inspire subsequent generations, revealing their timelessness in the human experience. In recent years, Dylan has shied away from playing his masterpiece in concert which has imbued it with an almost mythical quality. Dylan wrote the song in the fall of 1963, shortly after Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington, wanting to create an anthem for social justice. As he said, folk music and the Civil Rights movement were natural allies and he felt he could make a contribution to the movement by writing a powerful, ‘hypnotic’ anthem. It is one of the songs that earned Dylan a Nobel Prize in Literature, as the Nobel Committee recognized him ‘for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.’ An incredible piece which not only memorializes the massive social changes of the era in which it was written, but also the social movements to come—fifty years after Dylan wrote it, “The Times They Are-a-Changin’” continues to vibrate with new meaning. Starting Bid $10000

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Bob plays billiards—a classic 1980s publicity shot

537. Bob Dylan. Scarce satin-finish 10 x 8 photo portrait of the legendary singer-songwriter posing with a billiards cue during the mid-1980s, neatly signed in black felt tip, “Bob Dylan.” Reverse bears Blowup/David Appleby credit stamps. In fine condition, with two faint vertical bends. Dylan reportedly once said that he could measure the pulse of a town by its pool room—a desirable pose of the iconic musician, participating in one of his favorite pastimes. Starting Bid $200

Fully signed Penguin album with uncommon Fleetwood lineup

539. Fleetwood Mac. Penguin album by Fleetwood Mac, signed on the inner gatefold in blue ballpoint, “Mick Fleetwood,” “Thank you! Christine McVie,” “John McVie,” “Bob Welch,” “Bob Weston,” “Dave Walker,” and “Nick Pickett (loves Mick Fleetwood true) x.” In fine condition, with light scuffing, and a few small staple holes. The record is not included. Starting Bid $200

540. Jerry Garcia. Un-

used Concensus Reality, Inc. (Jerry Garcia Band) business check, 8.25 x 3.25, filled out and signed by Jerry Garcia, payable to Grateful Dead engineer John Cutler. In fine condition. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from REAL. Starting Bid $200

538. Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. Two sides of a mailing

envelope, measuring 6.25 x 3.75 together, postmarked at Asbury Park, New Jersey on July 1, 1963, signed in ballpoint on one side by Bob Dylan and on the other by Joan Baez. In very good condition, with edge wear impinging on Dylan’s signature, and aforementioned complete vertical separation to the center. Consignor notes that the autographs were obtained at a Baez concert at the Asbury Park Convention Hall on August 10, 1963; during the show Baez invited Bob Dylan onstage to perform. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $200

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541. Led Zeppelin: Jimmy Page. Impressive color limited

edition 30.5 x 33 silkscreen print showing Page playing his Les Paul electric guitar, numbered 272/300, signed in the lower border in pencil, “Jimmy Page.” Also signed in pencil by the artist, “Sandra Lawrence, 2000.” Rolled and in fine to very fine condition. Starting Bid $200


Zeppelin play Belgium in June 1980, three months before Bonham’s death 542. Led Zeppelin. Sought-after light

green 2.75 x 3.5 ticket stub for a Led Zeppelin concert at Vorst Nationaal in Forest, Belgium on June 20, 1980, signed in blue ballpoint by Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and John Bonham. Includes an unused red guest pass for Zeppelin’s 1980 European Tour, 3 x 4, with upper portion bearing a notation of June 21, 1980, the date of the band’s stop in Rotterdam, Holland. In fine condition. A warm-up for a planned tour of the United States, Led Zeppelin’s 1980 Tour Over Europe was the last concert tour the English rockers would ever undertake. The band played a total of 14 relatively low-key shows between June 17 and July 7, 1980, with the majority of dates occurring in West Germany. The band’s morale was high following the final concert and preparations for Led Zeppelin’s return to America began soon thereafter. However, the death of 32-year-old drummer John Bonham on September 25, 1980, derailed any such plans and the surviving members of Led Zeppelin would not play again for a live audience until their record-breaking reunion show on December 10, 2007. To date, with more than 500 Led Zeppelin concerts performed, this is the only fully-signed concert ticket to surface for sale, made particularly desirable by the timing in relation to Bonham’s untimely death. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $1000

543. Led Zeppelin. Hugely displayable and very rare original 30 x 39.5 color poster for a Led Zeppelin concert at Wembley’s Empire Pool on November 20, 1971. With graphics by Paper Tiger and brilliant design work by artist Steve Hardstaff, the poster features images of each band member surrounded by stars, lightning, and mystical effects, with bold stylized text reading: “Buffalo Concert Presentations, In Association with Peter Grant, Presents Electric Magic, Featuring Led Zeppelin, Plus Supporting Acts.” Rolled and in very good to fine condition, with creasing to the edges, and a tear to the top repaired with very old tape on the back. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the original owner: “I can confirm that I have been the sole owner of the Electric Magic Zeppelin poster which I purchased when I attended their concert at Wembley on 20th November 1971. The poster has remained in my possession, originally displayed on my bedroom wall and then stored in a cardboard tube since 1974.” Led Zeppelin’s five-hour ‘Electric Magic’ show at London’s Wembley Arena featured an array of bizarre vaudeville circus acts and included support from blues-rockers Stone the Crowes. When nearly 10,000 tickets sold out for the event within an hour, a second show was added for the following day. Starting Bid $200

544. Bob Marley. Very desirable ballpoint signature, “One Love, Bob Marley,” on an off-white 5 x 3.5 album page. In fine condition. Consignor notes that the signature was obtained at the Beacon Hotel in Glasgow, Scotland on either July 10th or 11th in 1980, when Bob Marley and the Wailers were in the city to perform two concerts at the Apollo Theatre. A crisp autograph from the reggae legend. Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $300

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Early handwritten lyrics for Oasis’s debut single, “Supersonic”

545. Oasis: Noel Gallagher. Rare partial handwritten lyrics to the Oasis song “Supersonic,” unsigned, penned in black ballpoint by Noel Gallagher on an off-white 8 x 8.5 notebook sheet with missing lower portion. The lyrics, in full: “I need to be myself / I cant be no one else / Im feeling supersonic / Give me gin n tonic / You can have it all but how much do you want it / You make me laugh / Give me your autograph / Can I ride with you in your BMW / You can sail with me in your yellow submarine / You need to find out cause no ones gonna tell you / what Im on about / You need to find a way for what you want to say / but before tomorrow / cause my friend said he’d take you home / he sits in a corner all alone / he lives under a waterfall / nobody can see him / nobody can ever hear him call, nobody can ever hear him call / you need to be yourself, you can’t be no one else / I know a girl called Elsa, shes into Alka Seltzer / she sniffs it through a cane on a supersonic train / and she makes me laugh, I got her autogr… / she done it with a…” In very good condition, with heavy overall creasing, and a tear touching the second stanza.

Accompanied by a letter of provenance, which reads, in. part: “I certify that this handwritten lyric to the track Supersonic was written by Noel Gallagher and obtained from the recording sessions for the album Definitely Maybe which was released in 1994. The recording sessions took place at Valley Studios in Wales. I cannot confirm whether it was written by Noel in the studio or [brought] in prior to the recording and rehearsals however I personally obtained the sheet from the studio in 1993 along with other items including broken guitar pedals, studio notes and strings that were used and discarded by the band members at the time.” The song was released as Oasis’s debut single on April 11, 1994, and appeared on their first album, Definitely Maybe, which came out later that summer. Starting Bid $200

Super early 1966 Pink Floyd autographs 546. Pink Floyd. Very desirable ballpoint signatures of Nick Mason (“Nick”), Roger Waters (“Rog”), Rick Wright (“Rick”), and Syd Barrett (“Syd”), on a neatly trimmed off-white 3 x 4 notebook page. Pencil notation on reverse indicates that the autographs were obtained on December 22, 1966, the date of a show at the Marquee Club in London. In very good to fine condition, with light creasing, and old tape stains to two edges, not affecting the signatures. Dating to only a year after their formation, these incredibly early Pink Floyd signatures are crisp, bold, and derive from the band’s original stomping grounds—Pink Floyd played the Marquee on Sunday afternoons as part of the Spontaneous Underground club. It was at the Marquee Club that future co-manager Peter Jenner saw the band perform for the first time, and on October 31, 1966, signed the four to a management contract with Jenner and Andrew King. A couple of weeks after these autographs were obtained, the band entered a proper recording studio (Chelsea’s Sound Techniques Studios), where they spent two days recording ‘Interstellar Overdrive,’ ‘Let’s Roll Another One (aka Candy And A Currant Bun)’, ‘Nick’s Boogie,’ and ‘Arnold Layne.’ This is a seldom-offered set with all original founding members, pre-dating any recorded material. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from REAL and a certificate of authenticity from Tracks, which notes: “As was common in this early stage of their career, all four band members signed their first name only…To date, this is the earliest set of Pink Floyd autographs known to exist. Indeed, Syd Barrett era Floyd sets are highly prized, and 1966 sets are virtually non-existent.” Starting Bid $500

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Rare fully signed Meddle album—“It’s the third one I have seen them sign in 1976 so it is quite unique” 547.

Pink Floyd.

German pressing of Pink Floyd’s sixth studio album Meddle, signed on the inner gatefold above their images in black felt tip: “David Gilmour,” “Roger Waters,” “Nick Mason,” and “Richard Wright.” In very good to fine condition, with all of the signatures a shade or two light. The record is included. The record is included. Accompanied by a transmittal letter on Pink Floyd stationery forwarding the album to a German fan, dated November 12, 1976, and reading: “Normally the band never give autographs but, as you sent the album cover and stamps etc, I persuaded them to sign. You are very lucky—it’s the third one I have seen them sign in 1976 so it is quite unique. Please do not tell your friends to send their albums, as I will not be able to get them signed too!” Accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks. Starting Bid $300

Photographic archive from Prince’s legendary shows at Earls Court in 1992

548. Prince. Impressive collection of 32 photographic strips containing a total of 179 color negatives taken during a Prince concert held at Manchester’s Main Road Football Stadium on June 26, 1992. The images vividly capture Prince and the New Power Generation as they strut the stage during their eclectic, wild performances, with Prince shown wearing a bright yellow suit and carrying his custom yellow Cloud guitar. The negatives are accompanied by four matching color 11.75 x 9.75 contact sheets, which show in greater detail the collection of concert images. Included with the negatives and contact sheets is a copy of an issue of the Controversy fanzine from August 1, 1992, Issue No. 36, which contains numerous images from the offered set of Prince negatives. For instance, the fanzine’s cover image, and many similar images, is a part of the negative lot and can also be found in the third row on the first contact sheet; additionally, the back cover image can also be found as part of the negatives and on a contact sheet. Also includes a Controversy fanzine from August 1991, Issue No. 30, and a color 16.25 x 23.25 poster of Prince. In overall fine condition, with general light handling wear. Accompanied by a letter of provenance: “I am writing to confirm that, during my time with Controversy, I was granted a photographer’s pass for three concerts in the UK. I hired photographers for each event. Excellent photographs resulted from two of the passes but the photos from the third set were very much below standard and unusable. The photographs I sent you... have never been published outside of Controversy magazine or book. They were exclusive to Controversy.” Controversy was the name of the UK-based Official International Prince Fan Club, which ran from 1983 to 1992. Starting Bid $200

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549. Queen. Sought-after glossy 8.5

x 6.75 group photo of Queen as they’re pictured on the cover of the ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ single, signed in black felt tip by Freddie Mercury, John Deacon, and Roger Taylor. In very good condition, with several diagonal creases, and trimmed edges which nip off the beginning of the “J” in Deacon’s signature. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from the original recipient, which reads, in part: “I believe I heard on FM radio they were doing an album signing in NYC in record dept of a dept store I don’t recall…so with LP under my arm we hopped a bus for New York, found the store, walked into lobby, there was a poster announcing their appearance…there was maybe 100 people there, roped off lines were set up going towards a table with three chairs…The door opened and in walks Freddie, Roger, and John, totally blew me away as I made my way to them, I shook their hand and told them the album was great, handed them my album with the picture I got from the lobby.” Starting Bid $200

The Stones rock the Plaza Ballroom in August 1963 550. Rolling Stones. Fantastic

vintage circa 1963 Rolling Stones fan club promo card, 5.5 x 4.5, signed on the reverse in blue ballpoint, “Mick Jagger, xxx,” “Brian Jones,” “Keith Richard,” “Charlie Boy,” and “Bill Wyman.” Caption on reverse lists the address of fan club national secretary Diane Nelson. In fine condition. A hugely desirable cast of very early, very bold Stones signatures. Accompanied by a photo of the original concert handbill and by a letter of provenance from the original recipient, which reads, in part: “I can verify these autographs are original as I collected them myself whilst I was a member of the Blue Stars pop group playing the Ma Regan circuit around the Birmingham area…We were a support band for all the visiting artists, along with other local groups. We used to sit around in the dressing room before going on stage, chatting as one does, this gave us ample time to obtain autographs. I had the privilege of meeting the Rolling Stones along with The Beatles, The Searchers, The Hollies, Freddie and the Dreamers, and lots lots more.” Also accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from Tracks noting that the signatures were “obtained at the Plaza Ballroom, Old Hill, Birmingham on August 10th 1963.” Starting Bid $1000

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551. U2. Early Island Records 45 RPM record sleeve for the U2 single ‘New Year’s Day / Treasure (Whatever Happened to Pete the Chop),’ signed on the front in red felt tip, “Larry,” and in blue felt tip, “Bono, 83,” “Adam,” and “Edge.” In very good to fine condition, with some light creasing. The record is not included. Starting Bid $200

552. ABBA. ABBA: The Album signed on the front cover in blue ballpoint by Agnetha

Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Benny Andersson, and Björn Ulvaeus, who adds “All our love” and a heart. In fine condition, with light scuffing. The record is included. Accompanied by a full letter of authenticity from REAL and a letter of provenance from the original recipient: “In 1978, I worked for ABC–TV as a staff costumer on the Olivia Newton-John TV Special, ‘Olivia!’ The guests included Andy Gibb and ABBA. They did a fantastic medley of their hits, and sang live, which was a rare thing for these types of shows at the time. I was working with costume designer, Fleur Thiemeyer, who asked if she could borrow my double-wrap belt to put on ABBA’s Benny Andersson, which he wore on the show. This was a few years before ABBA disbanded in 1982, but I could certainly see the tension between all of them… At the conclusion of the taping, they surprised me with an autographed copy of their new album, which I present in the auction. I’ve never played it.” Starting Bid $200

554. Michael Jackson. Ink signature, “Michael Jackson,” on a 3.75 x 4.25 lightly trimmed cardstock sheet printed with “Please Add Me to the Toys International Mailing List” on the reverse. In fine condition, with light toning from prior display. Accompanied by a detailed letter of provenance from the original recipient: “This signature…was personally given to me by Michael Jackson himself on July 4, 1992 in a toy store in Century City, California. My friend…and I were ‘sightseeing’ the skyscrapers around the primarily business area because everything seemed closed for the holiday and there was no traffic to contend with. Suddenly I spotted one business that appeared to be open, it was a large toy store…The store appeared empty except for 3 people standing near the back; a sales clerk, a man and a young boy who appeared to be about 10 years of age. Although he was dressed in ordinary clothing, it didn’t take long for us to recognize that the man was Michael Jackson…I noticed that he and the boy were about to leave the store. Just as they walked past me, I found a small piece of blank white paper and a pen and proceeded to walk behind them. When I realized they would soon be gone, I began mimicking a child’s plea out loud; ‘Please Michael, huh, can I have your autographs? Please’ The young boy who was walking at his side began to laugh out loud and at that moment, Michael Jackson, without stopping, put his right hand behind his back, with his thumb and forefinger open, as if waiting for me to give him the piece of paper. I quickly caught up and placed the pen and paper between his thumb and forefinger. Without missing a step, he quickly brought it around, signed it and put his hand behind him again to return it.” Starting Bid $200 www.RRAuction.com | 121


553. Michael Jackson. Uncommon 11

x 17 copy of a Westlake Studios mixing/ mastering sheet for the production of Michael Jackson’s seventh studio album Bad, signed in the lower border in blue ballpoint by Jackson. The sheet, identified as “Reel Number M-5BB,” consists of 32 tracking spots with upper portion reading: “Artist: Michael Jackson—Mix Master—, Title: Bad—Newest Edit Version, Client: Epic Records, Date: 7-3-87, Engineer: Bruce Swedien.” Rolled and in very good to fine condition, with some creasing and soiling, and a repaired tear to the lower right corner. Starting Bid $200

556. George Michael. Marvelous DS, one page, 11.75 x

555. Michael Jackson. Color glossy 7 x 5 photo of Michael

Jackson on stage during the Dangerous World Tour, signed and inscribed in black felt tip, “To Meg, Love Michael Jackson, London, 2006.” In very fine condition. Starting Bid $200

16.5, circa late 1985. A copy of No. 1 magazine’s 1985 reader’s poll form, which Michael has playfully filled out and signed in red ink. In full: Favourite Male Singer (“Green”), Favourite Female Singer (“June Montana (Brilliant)”), Greatest Group (“Wham”), Ghastliest Group (“Wham”), Best Single (“Freeway of Love”), Worst Single (“Shout—easily!”), Best Album (“Ice on Fire—Elton John”), Worst Album (“—”), Favourite Video (“I’m Your Man”), Best Pop TV Show (“D. O. D. P. (Best of Bad Bunch)”), Unmissable TV Programme (“I must have missed it”), Best Radio Show (“Steve Wright”), Direst DJ (“Chris Tarrant”), Favourite Film (“Back to the Future”), Most Stylish Pop Star (“Me”), Dodgiest Dresser (“Andy”), Best New Act (“—”), Most Missed Act (“Oh, how I miss them”), No. 1 Pin Up (“Can’t say me again, so I won’t”), Romance of the Year (“Andrew Ridgeley & Andrew Ridgeley”), Creep of the Year (“Same”), Bore of the Year (“Ditto”), Event of the Year (“Live Aid, of course”), I Would Make My Personal Award of the Year to (“St. Bob, or anyone who’ll pay for it”), For (“Obvious reasons”), Because (“that’s the kind of guy I am”), Name (“George Michael”), Address (“Wouldn’t you like to know, eh”), and Phone No. (“999”). In very good to fine condition, with creasing to the edges. A humorous and potentially insightful list of answers from Michael, whose light barbs at fellow Wham! musician Andrew Ridgeley may point to his frustrations with the group’s direction; Wham! disbanded the upcoming spring, with both Michael and Ridgeley affirming the break as ‘amicable.’ Still, 1985 proved a momentous year for the duo, with Wham! undertaking a huge world tour and making an appearance at the Live Aid benefit concert on July 13th, with Michael performing a rendition of ‘Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me’ with Elton John. Starting Bid $200 122 |

May 8, 2019 | MUSIC


558. Leonard Bernstein

559. Nadia Boulanger Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

562. Classical Music Starting Bid $200

560. Maria Callas Starting Bid $200

561. Lina Cavalieri Starting Bid $200

563. Van Cliburn Starting Bid $200

564. Alfred Cortot

565. Jacques Thibaud

566. Virgil Thomson

567. Art Blakey

568. Miles Davis

569. Dizzy Gillespie

570. Dizzy Gillespie

571. B. B. King

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 123


572. Music

Starting Bid $200

576. Charles Strouse Starting Bid $200

579. Tim Buckley Starting Bid $200

584. Beatles: Ringo Starr

Starting Bid $200 124 | May 8, 2019 | MUSIC

573. Edith Piaf

Starting Bid $200

574. Edith Piaf

Starting Bid $200

577. Clark Terry Starting Bid $200

575. Cole Porter and Ella Fitzgerald Starting Bid $200

578. Sarah Vaughan Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

581. Peter, Paul, and Mary

582. The Animals

585. Beatles: Ringo Starr

586. Beatles: Klaus Voormann

587. Chuck Berry

580. The Highwaymen

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200


588. The Big 3 and Felix Pappalardi Starting Bid $200

591. Ruth Brown Starting Bid $200

592. Eric Clapton Starting Bid $200

595. Alice Cooper Starting Bid $200

598. Marvin Gaye Starting Bid $200

589. David Bowie

590. James Brown

593. Eric Clapton

594. Dire Straits

596. Dream Theater Starting Bid $200

597. The Eagles: Henley and Walsh

599. Genesis

600. Bill Graham

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 125


601. Jazz, Blues, and Rock Starting Bid $200

603. Jethro Tull

602. Jefferson Starship Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

604. Led Zeppelin: Jimmy Page

605. Loverboy

606. Frankie Lymon

607. The Monkees

608. Ricky Nelson

609. Roy Orbison

610. Carl Perkins

612. R.E.M.

613. The Ramones

Starting Bid $200

611. Tom Petty Starting Bid $200

126 | May 8, 2019 | MUSIC

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

614. Lou Reed

Starting Bid $200


615. Paul Simon

616. Paul Simon

Starting Bid $200

620. Thin Lizzy

628. Flo Rida

622. Velvet Undergound: Nico

623. Johnny Winter and Rick Derringer

Starting Bid $200

626. Frank and Moon Unit Zappa

Starting Bid $200

629. Whitney Houston

630. Lady Gaga

631. Lady Gaga

Starting Bid $200

624. Stevie Wonder

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

618. Bruce Springsteen - PSA/DNA GEM MINT 10 Starting Bid $200

621. Bobby Troup

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

617. Simon and Garfunkel

Starting Bid $200

625. Frank Zappa

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

627. Beyonce

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 127


classic entertainment

Exotic oversized portrayal of the Parisian diva

632. Josephine Baker. Beautiful

vintage glossy 9 x 11.5 portrait of Baker lounging on a tiger skin rug and wearing a gorgeous gown, by Studio Keyston Talbot, prominently signed and inscribed in fountain pen, “A Directeur Waltuch, en souvenir de Josephine Baker, 1932 Wien.” In fine condition. Already an established marquee draw at the Parisian cabaret music hall Folies Bergere, Baker’s popularity had soared soared further with the 1931 release of ‘J’ai deux amours,’ the most successful song of her career. Baker is quite scarce in signed photos of this size, and this is a particularly appealing example. Starting Bid $200

Garland to Luft: “Our marriage failed—but I’ll be your friend forever!” 633. Judy Garland. ALS

signed “J,” one page, 7.25 x 10.5, Prince Conti letterhead, February 1963. A private letter to her husband Sidney Luft, in full: “No matter what way or manner you handle what’s ahead for us— in our divorce—your children need, love and want you. You’re their father and always will be! Our marriage failed—but I’ll be your friend forever!” In very good to fine condition, with a paperclip impression to the top edge and a stain to the lower right corner. Accompanied by the original envelope addressed in Garland’s own hand. Starting Bid $200

128 |

May 8, 2019 | CLASSIC ENTERTAINMENT

634. Paul Newman and Robert Redford. Two

checks: a personal check, 6.25 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Newman, “Paul L. Newman,” payable to cash for $200, dated July 24, 1969; and a personal check, 6 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Redford, “Robert Redford,” payable to Rocky Mountain Helicopters for $200, dated January 12, 1983. In overall fine condition. Starting Bid $200

Stellar multi-signed Empire Strikes Back novel starring Ford, Hamill, Fisher, and more

635. Star Wars. Signed book: Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back by Donald F. Glut. First edition. London: Sphere Books, 1980. Paperback, 4.25 x 7, 215 pages. Signed on the title page and adjacent page in ink and felt tip by Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Billy Dee Williams, David Prowse, Anthony Daniels, Peter Mayhew, and producer Gary Kurtz. Also signed on the half-title page in black ink by director Irvin Kershner. In fine condition, with light age toning to the inner pages. An uncommon and highly appealing format signed by nine cast and crew members from the fan-favorite second installation of the Star Wars series. Starting Bid $200 636. George Zucco. . Highly

desirable vintage matte-finish 14 x 11 photo of Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce, and George Zucco posing with a couple of fans on the set of the 1939 film The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, signed in fountain pen by Zucco. In fine condition, with one small crease, and some light silvering along the edges. Zucco remains scarce across all formats, but is practically nonexistent in signed photos as his most famous character, Professor Moriarty. Starting Bid $200


McQueen’s annotated script for The Thomas Crown Affair 637. Steve McQueen. Steve

McQueen’s personally-owned and -used annotated script for the 1968 classic The Thomas Crown Affair, 8.5 x 11, 109 numbered pages plus revisions, custom leatherbound by the California Bookbinding Co., gilt-stamped on the front, “Thomas Crown and Company, Steve McQueen.” An opening page in an unknown hand identifies the actors and final title, “The Thomas Crown Affair,” which also differs from the working title on the first page of the script, “The Crown Caper.”

View additonal pages online at www.RRAuction.com

The script is annotated throughout, with at least 19 pages exhibiting McQueen’s own handwriting; his notes reveal his dedication to his craft and his working process during the production of a film. Some of the notes are for stage directions—for example, “Sandy looking at ball” and “Look at Sandy,” in a conversation during a golfing sequence, and “Look at watch” during a conversation between Crown, Vicky, and Erwin. A more substantial comment is written beside Crown’s dialogue as he departs a scene, “Should have something else…stage is set only for reaction—a little of the believability is lost.” In another instance, McQueen inquires, “How do I play this,” during a scene with Vicky. As the script approaches its conclusion, McQueen pens in the margin of a heavily annotated page, “There has to be a showdown and it has to be damned cleaver [sic].” In the following pages, he writes, “I think it could be more cleanly written and polished—refer back to showdown,” and discusses rewriting one of Vicky’s lines: “We talked of rewriting this, ‘No I’m not going to test you…’” At the very end, he pens, “I don’t think we should know whether he gets a way or not—and blond hair—maybe a mustache?” In fine condition, with pages evidently trimmed during the re-binding process, affecting some of the handwritten annotations. In one of the classic caper films of the 1960s, McQueen plays the sophisticated millionaire Thomas Crown, who orchestrates the perfect crime for sport—a bank heist of over two million dollars. The film revolves around the hunt for the mastermind by a sultry insurance investigator, Vicky Anderson, played by Faye Dunaway. Though now remembered as a cult classic, critics agreed with McQueen’s instincts about the writing—Roger Ebert called it ‘possibly the most under-plotted, underwritten, overphotographed film of the year. Which is not to say it isn’t great to look at. It is.’ As the leading man’s personally-used, heavilyannotated script from a classic film, this is a truly remarkable piece of Hollywood history. Starting Bid $2500

www.RRAuction.com | 129


Choice trio of the first three Playboy issues, including a rare ‘red star’ #1— all graded 9.0 by CGC 638. Playboy #1, #2, and #3 - CGC 9.0. Amazing set of

the first three issues of Playboy magazine from December 1953, January 1954, and February 1954, all encapsulated and graded by CGC as 9.0 (Very Fine/Near Mint), beginning with the ultra-rare ‘red star’ version of Playboy #1. Includes: Playboy #1 ‘Red Star Copy’ (HMH Publishing Co., December 1953) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - off-white to white pages - featuring Marilyn Monroe on the front cover and inside. This iconic magazine, which famously features a full-color nude of Miss Monroe (the one and only “Sweetheart of the Month”) as the centerfold, launched Hugh Hefner’s Playboy into the national spotlight as America’s leading magazine for men’s entertainment. This ‘red star’ version—one of three variants of the issue—is distinguished by the small red star on the cover, to the left of the title; the others, a newsstand edition and a ‘Page 3’ version with the third page numbered, are considered more common. The CGC census reveals the ‘Red Star Copy’ as the rarest variant: of the 319 Playboy #1s evaluated by CGC, only 22 have been the ‘Red Star Copy.’ Of these 22, just two have been graded as 9.0, with one higher. Playboy #2 (HMH Publishing Co., January 1954) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - white pages - featuring Margie Harrison on the front cover and inside as the very first “Playmate of the Month.” The CGC census records just nine examples at this grade or higher (the highest graded is 9.2, just one increment higher). Playboy #2 is widely considered to be the scarcest of any Playboy magazine—the print run was much smaller than later issues, as Hefner was unsure of how successful the magazine would be, and it appears at auction far less frequently than the first issue. High-grade examples of this issue are extremely difficult to find. Playboy #3 (HMH Publishing Co., February 1954) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - white pages - featuring a Marilyn Waltz (as Margaret Scott) centerfold and a Yvonne Menard cover. The CGC census records seventeen examples at this grade or higher. Starting Bid $5000

130 |

May 8, 2019 | CLASSIC ENTERTAINMENT


639. 2001: A Space Odyssey Starting Bid $200

640. 60 Minutes Starting Bid $200

643. Lauren Bacall Starting Bid $200

646. Capucine

647. Lou Costello

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

650. Johnny Depp Starting Bid $200

651. Johnny Depp Starting Bid $200

641. Abbott and Costello

642. Actors and Actresses

644. Lauren Bacall

645. Josephine Baker

648. Olivia de Havilland

649. Robert De Niro

652. Johnny Depp

653. Johnny Depp

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 131


654. Johnny Depp Starting Bid $200

655. Isadora Duncan Starting Bid $200

656. Clint Eastwood Starting Bid $200

659. Errol Flynn

658. Marty Feldman

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

657. Easy Rider Starting Bid $200

661. Harrison Ford Starting Bid $200

662. Judy Garland

663. Betty Grable

664. Tom Hanks Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

666. Stan Lee

667. Vivien Leigh

668. Vivien Leigh

669. James Mason

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

132 | May 8, 2019 | CLASSIC ENTERTAINMENT

Starting Bid $200

665. Stan Lee

Starting Bid $200


670. Marilyn Monroe Starting Bid $200

671. Marilyn Monroe Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

673. Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller

672. Marilyn Monroe

Starting Bid $200

674. Marilyn Monroe and Dean Martin

675. Marilyn Monroe and Jack Benny

676. Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio

677. Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio

678. Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio

679. Marilyn Monroe and Montgomery Clift

680. Marilyn Monroe and US Servicemen

681. Marilyn Monroe, Miller, Montand, and Signoret Starting Bid $200

682. Marilyn Monroe, Irving Berlin, and Earl Wilson

683. Monty Python

684. My Fair Lady

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

685. Paul Newman Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 133


686. Paul Newman

687. Jack Nicholson

688. Jack Nicholson Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

690. Pearl Harbor

691. Rod Serling

692. Sylvester Stallone

693. Star Trek: Shatner and Nimoy

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

694. James Stewart

695. Elizabeth Taylor

696. John Travolta

698. Johnny Weissmuller

699. Raquel Welch

700. Orson Welles

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

134 | May 8, 2019 | CLASSIC ENTERTAINMENT

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

689. Al Pacino

Starting Bid $200

697. Twilight

Starting Bid $200

701. Mae West

Starting Bid $200


sports

702. 1933 Goudey #60 Waite Hoyt PSA NM 7.

Graded by PSA NM 7. This card of the 1920s Ya n k e e s pitching ace has all the qualities of a NM-MT example with bold color, four sharp corners and no print issues. Starting Bid $100

703. 1939 Play Ball #30 Bill Dickey PSA NM 7. Graded by PSA

NM 7. One of the nicest examples of this card we have seen, this copy has near perfect centering, with four razor sharp corners and blemish free surfaces. A definite resubmission candidate. Starting Bid $200

705. 1972 Topps #622 MVP Award - Signed by Roger Maris and Stan Musial - PSA/DNA Encapsulated. Bold blue ink signatures of Roger

Maris and Stan Musial grace this 1972 Topps card #622, the MVPs. Graded and encapsulated by PSA/ DNA, cert # 84126788. Starting Bid $200

706. 1964 Topps Giants Autographed Collection (26). Ink - Peters, McMillan (2), Colavito, Gentile, Ellsworth,

Fregosi, Friend, Ward, Callison, Causey (2), Alvis, Cisco, Santo. Sharpie - Bailey, Ford, Kaline, Gonzalez, Groat, F. Robinson, Ward, Callison, B. Robinson (HOF 83), and Wagner. Starting Bid $200

707. 1972 Topps Baseball Near Set of (736/787) Cards. Near set of (736/787 -

missing 686 Garvey, 695 Carew, 696 Carew, 752 Morgan TR and 47 other high #s) cards w/#37 Yaz (VG/EX), 49 Mays (FR/GD), 79 Fisk RC (EX, miscut), 299 Aaron (VG), 300 Aaron IA (VG), 309 Clemente (VG), 310 Clemente IA (GD), 433 Bench (EX), 435 Jackson (GD/ VG), 445 Seaver (VG/EX), 559 Rose (EX), 560 Rose IA (VG/EX), 595 Ryan (EX), 600 Kaline (VG), 751 Carlton TR (FR) and 754 F. Robinson TR (GD). Grades VG to EX/MT, about 25% lesser. Starting Bid $200

www.RRAuction.com | 135


709. 1977 Topps and Others Mostly Star Wars Card Collection. Includes THREE Star Wars sets, the blue, red and

yellow (cards 1-196) and all 33 stickers, plus two other ‘sci-fi’ sets from that era—the 1980 Empire Strikes Back SERIES 3 only set and the 1976 Topps Space 1999 complete set. Clean sets from the original owner, and all mostly mostly EX-MT to NM with some better. Includes: 1976 Space 1999 - complete 66 card set. 1977 Star Wars - complete from 1-196 plus all 33 stickers from these 3 series. 1980 Empire Strikes Back - complete 3rd Series 66 card set. Starting Bid $100

710. 1981 and 1986 Topps Unopened Wax Boxes. Pair of Topps wax boxes, one each from 1981 and 1986. Possible Hall of Famer Tim Raines Rookie Card in the 1981 box, plus the usual crop of Hall of Famers such as George Brett, Robin Yount, Tom Seaver, Nolan Ryan plus Pete Rose. Starting Bid $100

711. 1983 Donruss Autographed Diamond Kings Complete Set (26). Offered is a completely autographed

set of this popular ‘subset’ within the 1983 Donruss issue. Occupying the first 26 cards (one is of artist Dick Perez), the first 26 player cards were known as the “Diamond Kings,” which comprised of artist portraits of one top player from each team. This set is complete and includes Fernando Valenzuela, Rollie Fingers, Reggie Jackson, Jim Palmer, John Morris, George Foster, Jim Sundberg, Willie Stargell (d.), Dave Stieb, Joe Niekro (d.), Rickey Henderson, Dale Murphy, Toby Harrah, Bill Buckner, Willie Wilson, Steve Carlton, Ron Guidry, Steve Rogers, Kent Hrbek, Keith Hernandez, Floyd Bannister, Johnny Bench, Britt Burns, Joe Morgan, Carl Yastrzemski and Terry Kennedy. Starting Bid $200

136 |

May 8, 2019 | SPORTS

712. Bobby Fischer. Signed book: Fischer: 222 Matches. Madrid, Spain: Ediciones Eseuve, 1990. Spanish-language paperback, 4.5 x 6.75, 126 pages. Signed on the half-title page in black ballpoint by Bobby Fischer. In very good to fine condition, with a corner crease, and ownership notation, to the front cover; inner pages are fine. Starting Bid $200


713. Ty Cobb. Personal check, 8 x 3, filled out and signed by Cobb, “Tyrus R. Cobb,” payable to General Petroleum Corp. for $79.25, May 8, 1953. In fine condition. Encapsulated in a PSA/DNA authentication holder. Starting Bid $200

715. Jackie Robinson. Choice ballpoint signature 714. Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris. Color glossy 8 x

10 photo of Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris posing together in their New York Yankees uniforms, signed in blue felt tip by both. Mounted behind plexiglass on a ‘marbleized’ wooden 12 x 15 plaque, with engraved plate below honoring their historic 1961 season: “’The M & M Boys,’ Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle, Single Season Record - 115 Home Runs.” The photo is in fine condition, and could be easily removed from the display. Starting Bid $200

and inscription, “Best wishes Stan, Jackie Robinson,” on an off-white 5 x 3 card. In very fine condition. Starting Bid $200

www.RRAuction.com | 137


“With God’s help we will come through this crisis” 716. Jackie Robinson. TLS, one page, 7.25 x 10.5, personal letterhead, March 15, 1968. Letter to Mrs. and Mrs. Arthur Smith in Telford, Pennsylvania, in full: “Your letter was so sympathetic at a time when we are facing a most serious family problem. It is of great comfort to know that people care and we are grateful to you. We know the only real solution is the love and understanding we as a family give our son, and it is our intention to give everything we have to pull him through this critical condition. I have faith that our family ties are strong and that with God’s help we will come through this crisis. Again our thanks. You will never know how much your interest means to our family.” In fine condition. Robinson’s eldest son, Jackie Robinson, Jr., had served in the Vietnam War and was wounded in action on November 19, 1965. He struggled with addiction following his discharge from the Army, and on March 4, 1968, was arrested on a heroin possession charge in Stamford, Connecticut. The Robinsons received strong support from their closest friends, as evidenced by this heartfelt letter written by the elder Robinson nine days after his son’s arrest. The family did indeed come through the crisis—Jackie, Jr. managed to turn his life around, going on to become assistant regional director of Daytop, Inc., an addicts’ rehabilitation center in Seymour, Connecticut, before being killed in a tragic automobile accident in 1971. A wonderful letter that embodies the strength of character and sense of faith that made it possible for Jackie Robinson to break baseball’s color barrier in 1947. Starting Bid $900

717. Jackie Robinson. First National City Bank of New York check, 6.25 x 2.75, filled out and signed by Robinson, “Jack Robinson,” payable to his mother, “Mallie Robinson,” for $125, July 21, 1960. Endorsed on the reverse by Mallie Robinson. Encapsulated in a PSA/DNA authentication holder. In fine condition. A unique association piece as a check made out by Robinson to his mother, who raised him and his four siblings by herself in Pasadena. Starting Bid $200

138 |

May 8, 2019 | SPORTS

719. Cy Young. Highly desirable Artvue Type I black-and-white Hall of Fame plaque card, signed in the lower border in blue ballpoint, “Cy Young.” In fine condition. Encapsulated in a PSA/DNA authentication holder. A handsome example boasting a crisp signature from the Hall of Fame hurler. Starting Bid $200


721. Muhammad Ali Starting Bid $200

725. Athletes

722. Muhammad Ali Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

724. Muhammad Ali and Sonny Liston Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

727. Baseball Hall of Famers: Haines and Frick

728. Boston Red Sox: 2018

729. Boxing

730. Marcel Cerdan

731. Mickey Cochrane

732. Earle Combs

Starting Bid $200

733. Dizzy Dean Starting Bid $200

726. Baseball

723. Muhammad Ali

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $100

734. Joe DiMaggio Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

735. Roger Federer Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 139


736. Hank Greenberg

737. Hank Greenberg

Starting Bid $200

738. Hank Greenberg Starting Bid $100

741. Ernie Lombardi

Starting Bid $200

739. Derek Jeter

742. Joe Louis

Starting Bid $100

Starting Bid $200

745. Mickey Mantle

746. Joe McCarthy

Starting Bid $200

140 | May 8, 2019 | SPORTS

740. Tony Lema

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

743. Joe Louis

Starting Bid $200

747. Joe Namath Starting Bid $200

748. Jack Nicklaus Starting Bid $200


749. Jack Nicklaus Starting Bid $100

750. Jesse Owens Starting Bid $200

753. Eppa Rixey Starting Bid $100

756. Casey Stengel and Ford Frick Starting Bid $200

759. Ted Williams Starting Bid $200

751. Arnold Palmer

752. Pele

Starting Bid $200

Starting Bid $200

754. Nolan Ryan

755. Louis Schneider

Starting Bid $200

757. Pie Traynor Starting Bid $100

Starting Bid $200

758. Paul Waner Starting Bid $200

760. Ted Williams and Tony Conigliaro Starting Bid $200

Detailed description & condition statements are available at www.RRAuction.com or (800) 937-3880 | 141


CONDITIONS OF SALE ANYONE EITHER REGISTERING TO BID OR PLACING A BID (“BIDDER”) ACCEPTS THESE CONDITIONS OF SALE AND ENTERS INTO A LEGALLY, BINDING, ENFORCEABLE AGREEMENT WITH R&R AUCTION COMPANY OF MASSACHUSETTS, LLC (“RR AUCTION,” TOGETHER WITH BIDDER, THE “PARTIES”). The following terms and conditions (“Conditions of Sale”) constitute the sole terms and conditions under which RR Auction will offer for sale and sell the property described in the catalog of items for auction (the “Catalog”). These Conditions of Sale constitute a binding agreement between the Parties with respect to the auction in which Bidder participates (the “Auction”). By bidding at the Auction, whether in person, through an agent or representative, by telephone, facsimile, online, absentee bid, or by any other form of bid or by any other means, Bidder acknowledges the thorough reading and understanding of all of these Conditions of Sale, all descriptions of items in the Catalog, and all matters incorporated herein by reference, and agrees to be fully bound thereby. This acknowledgement is a material term of these Conditions of Sale and of the consideration under which RR Auction agrees to these terms.

also be determined by pre-approval of credit based on a combination of criteria: RRAuction.com history, related industry references, bank verification, a credit bureau report and/or a personal guarantee for a corporate or partnership entity in advance of the Auction venue. Buyer’s Premium: The Bidder acknowledges and agrees that a 25% buyer’s premium will be added to the hammer price on all individual lots sold in timed and live Auctions. Buyer’s premium for our Sports Auctions is 20%. For payment other than by cash, delivery will not be made unless and until full payment has been received by RR Auction, i.e., check or wired funds have fully cleared. Unless otherwise agreed in writing, signed by RR Auction, payment in full is due within thirteen (13) calendar days of the Auction or within twelve (12) calendar days of the invoice date, whichever is later. All purchases delivered to Massachusetts are subject to applicable Massachusetts sales tax unless the purchaser possesses a Massachusetts sales tax exemption number. Pennsylvania sales or use tax may be due in connection with the purchase and delivery of tangible personal property to Pennsylvania individuals and businesses. The purchaser is required to file a use tax return if tax is due in connection with the purchase and delivery in the Commonwealth. This notice is required pursuant to the provisions of the Tax Reform Code of 1971. 72 P.S. § 7213.2.

RR Auction and Auction: This Auction is presented by RR Auction, a d/b/a/ of R&R Auction Company of Massachusetts, LLC, as identified with the applicable licensing information on the title page of the Catalog or on the www.RRauction.com Internet site (“RRauction.com”). The Auction is conducted under these Conditions of Sale. Announcements and corrections from the podium at live auctions and those made through the Conditions of Sale appearing on the Internet at RRauction.com supersede those in the printed Catalog.

Bidding: Each Bidder’s determination of its bid should be based upon its own examination of the item(s), rather than the strict reliance as to what is represented in the Catalog, online or elsewhere. In any purchase or sale, the value of the item(s) is determined by the price. THE BIDDER HEREBY ASSUMES ALL RISKS OF VALUATION CONCERNING ANY AND ALL PURCHASES.

Bidder: Bidder shall mean the original Bidder on the property offered for sale by RR Auction and not any subsequent owner or other person who may acquire or have acquired an interest therein. If Bidder is an agent, the agency must be disclosed in writing to RR Auction prior to the time of sale, otherwise the benefits of the warranty shall be limited to the agent and not transferable to the undisclosed principal.

RR AUCTION IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ERRORS IN BIDDING. A Bidder should make certain to bid on the correct lot and that the bid is the maximum (plus the Buyer’s Premium) that the Bidder is willing and able to pay. Since other Bidders (by mail, facsimile, online, and in person) will be present, and since a re-offering could damage the momentum of the sale, once the hammer has fallen and RR Auction has announced the winning Bidder, such Bidder is unconditionally bound to pay for the lot, even if the Bidder has made a mistake.

The rights granted to Bidder under these Conditions of Sale are personal and may not be assigned or transferred to any other person or entity, whether by operation of law or otherwise without the express written assent of RR Auction. Bidder may not transfer, assign, or otherwise convey these Conditions of Sale or any of the rights herein, and such purported transfer, assignment, or conveyance shall be null and void. No third party may rely on any benefit or right conferred on any Bidder by these Conditions of Sale, and no third party is intended as a beneficiary of these Conditions of Sale. Bids will not be accepted from minor persons under eighteen (18) years of age without a parent’s written consent containing an acknowledgment of the Conditions of Sale herein and indicating their agreement to be bound thereby on behalf of the Bidder. All Bidders must meet RR Auction’s qualifications to bid. Any Bidder who is not a client in good standing of RR Auction may be disqualified at RR Auction’s sole option and will not be awarded lots. Such determination may be made by RR Auction in its sole and unlimited discretion, at any time prior to, during, or even after the close of the Auction. RR Auction reserves the right to exclude any person from the Auction. If an entity places a bid, then the person executing the bid on behalf of the entity agrees to personally guarantee payment for any successful bid. By accepting the Conditions of Sale, Bidder personally and unconditionally guarantees payment. Credit: In order to place bids, Bidders who have not established credit with RR Auction must either furnish satisfactory credit information (including two collectibles-related business references) or supply additional information if requested, well in advance of the Auction. Bidders who are not members of RRAuction.com should pre-register before the close of the Auction to allow adequate time to contact references. Credit will be granted at the discretion of RR Auction. Additionally Bidders who have not previously established credit or who wish to bid in excess of their established credit history may be required to provide their social security number, or the last four digits thereof, so a credit check may be performed prior to RR Auction’s acceptance of a bid. Check writing privileges and immediate delivery of merchandise may

All prospective Bidders who examine lots in person prior to the sale shall personally assume all responsibility for any damage they cause in so doing. RR Auction shall have sole discretion in determining the value of the damage caused, which shall be promptly paid by the prospective Bidder. Title to any lot remains with Consignor, any secured party of the Consignor, or assignee of Consignor, as the case may be, until the lot is paid for in full by Bidder. RR Auction reserves the right to require payment in full before delivering any lot to the successful Bidder. It is the Bidder’s responsibility and obligation to have the lots fully insured while in their possession. Bidder assumes any and all RISK OF LOSS once the lot(s) is in Bidder’s possession. Bidder grants to RR Auction or its assigns the right to offset any sums due, or found to be due by RR Auction, and to make such offset from any past, subsequent or future consignment, or items acquired by Bidder in possession or control of RR Auction or from any sums due to Bidder by RR Auction. Bidder further grants RR Auction a purchase money security interest in such sums or items to the extent applicable, and agrees to execute such documents as may be reasonably necessary to grant RR Auction such security interest. Bidder agrees that RR Auction and its assigns shall be a secured party with respect to items bought by Bidder and in the possession of RR Auction, to the extent of the maximum indebtedness, plus all accrued expenses, until the indebtedness is paid. By bidding in this sale, Bidder personally and unconditionally guarantees payment. The authorized representative of any corporate Bidder who is present at the sale shall provide RR Auction or its agent, prior to the commencement of the bidding (or at the time of registration), with a statement signed by a principal, director or officer that they he or she personally and unconditionally guarantees any payment due RR Auction. RR Auction may at its sole and absolute discretion, make loans or advances to Consignors and/or prospective Bidders. In the event of a successful challenge to the title to any goods purchased pursuant to these Conditions of Sale and the exclusive remedies provided herein, RR Auction agrees to reimburse any Bidder in an amount equal to the successful bid price actually paid by Bidder at auction plus any Buyer’s


Premium actually paid, in full and complete satisfaction of all claims, which once tendered by RR Auction, relieves and releases RR Auction from any responsibility whatsoever to the Bidder, even if the instrument is not cashed or is returned. Bidding Options: Non-Internet bids (including but not limited to in-person, facsimile, phone and mail bids) are treated similarly to floor bids in that they must be on-increment. Any in-person, facsimile, phone, or mail bids that do not conform to a full increment will be rounded up or down to the nearest full increment and this revised amount will be considered Bidder’s high bid. When identical mail or facsimile bids are submitted, preference is given to the first received. To ensure the greatest accuracy, written bids should be entered on the standard printed bid sheet and be received at RR Auction’s place of business at least twenty-four (24) hours before the Auction start. RR Auction is not responsible for executing mail bids or facsimile bids received on or after the day the first lot is sold, nor Internet bids submitted after the published closing time; nor is RR Auction responsible for proper execution of bids submitted by telephone, mail, facsimile, e-mail, Internet, or in person once the Auction begins. In all Auctions, bids on an item must raise the current high bid by at least 10%, or as specified on a per-Auction basis. Bids will be accepted in whole dollar amounts only. No “buy” or “unlimited” bids will be accepted. In a live sale, bids on an item can change at the discretion of RR Auction.

completed using the selected funding source, Bidder agrees to complete payment. If RR Auction refers any invoice to an attorney for collection, the Bidder agrees to pay attorney’s fees, court costs, and other collection costs incurred by RR Auction. If RR Auction assigns collection to its house counsel, such attorney’s time expended on the matter shall be compensated at a rate comparable to the hourly rate of independent attorneys. RR Auction shall have a lien against the merchandise purchased by the Bidder to secure payment of the Auction invoice. RR Auction is further granted a lien and the right to retain possession of any other property of the Bidder then held by RR Auction or its affiliates to secure payment of any Auction invoice or any other amounts due RR Auction or affiliates from the Bidder. With respect to these lien rights, RR Auction shall have all the rights of a secured creditor, including but not limited to the right of sale. In addition, with respect to payment of the Auction invoice(s), the Bidder waives any and all rights of offset he might otherwise have against RR Auction and the consignor of the merchandise included on the invoice (the “Consignor”). If a Bidder owes RR Auction or its affiliates on any account, RR Auction and its affiliates shall have the right to offset such unpaid account by any credit balance due Bidder, and it may secure by possessory lien any unpaid amount by any of the Bidder’s property in their possession. All checks, cashiers checks, bank checks, or money orders are payable to R&R Auction Company of Massachusetts, LLC.

RR Auction reserves the right to accept or decline any bid. Bids must be for an entire lot and each lot constitutes a separate sale. All bids are per lot unless otherwise announced. Live auction lots will be sold in their numbered sequence unless RR Auction directs otherwise. It is unlawful and illegal for Bidders to collude, pool, or agree with another Bidder to pay less than the fair value for lot(s). For live auctions, RR Auction will have final discretion in the event that any dispute should arise between Bidders. RR Auction will determine the successful Bidder, cancel the sale, or re-offer and resell the lot or lots in dispute. RR Auction will have final discretion to resolve any disputes arising after the sale and in online auctions. If any dispute arises, RR Auction’s sale record is conclusive.

Sales Tax: RR Auction is a remote seller and we are now required to collect Sales/ Use Tax from our bidders. The states that we have nexus in we will be required to collect and remit sales tax on your behalf. Each state has different requirements to meet nexus. When RR Auction has achieved a certain monetary and/or invoice threshold in each state we will apply sales tax to your total invoice. Please go to our terms on our website to see the states that are affected.

Payment: Subject to fulfillment of all of the Conditions of Sale set forth herein, upon the sooner of (1) the passing of title to the offered lot pursuant to these Conditions of Sale, or (2) possession of the offered lot by the Bidder, Bidder thereupon (a) assumes full risk and responsibility (including without limitation, liability for or damage to frames or glass covering prints, paintings, photos, or other works), and (b) will immediately pay the full purchase price or such part as RR Auction may require. In addition to other remedies available to RR Auction by law, RR Auction reserves the right to impose from the date of sale a late charge of 1.5% per month of the total purchase price if payment is not made in accordance with the conditions set forth herein. All property must be removed from RR Auction’s premises by the Bidder at his/ her expense not later than thirty (30) business days following its sale and, if it is not so removed, RR Auction may send the purchased property to a public warehouse for the account, at the risk and expense of the Bidder.

The sales tax rate is determined by the State, Country, and City where purchases are shipped to. If you decide to pick up your purchases at our New Hampshire location you will not be required to pay sales tax. The State of New Hampshire does not have a general sales and use tax. All purchases picked up at our Massachusetts location will be taxed at the current rate of 6.25%.

Payment is due upon closing of the Auction session, or upon presentment of an invoice. RR Auction reserves the right to void an invoice if payment in full is not received within thirteen (13) calendar days of the Auction or within twelve (12) calendar days of the invoice date. In cases of nonpayment, RR Auction’s election to void a sale does not relieve the Bidder from their obligation to pay RR Auction its fees (seller’s and Buyer’s Premium) on the lot and any other damages pertaining to the lot. All sales are strictly for cash in United States dollars (including U.S. currency, bank wire, cashier checks, eChecks, and bank money orders), and are subject to all reporting requirements. All deliveries are subject to good funds; funds being received in RR Auction’s account before delivery of the Purchases; and all payments are subject to a clearing period. RR Auction reserves the right to determine if a check constitutes “good funds”: checks drawn on a U.S. bank are subject to a ten (10) calendar day hold, and ten (10) business days when drawn on an international bank. Clients with pre-arranged credit status may receive immediate credit for payments via e-Check, personal or corporate checks. In the event that a Bidder’s payment is dishonored upon presentment(s), Bidder shall pay the maximum statutory processing fee set by applicable state law. If Bidder attempts to pay via check and the financial institution denies the transfer from Bidder’s bank account, or the payment cannot be

If we have not achieved nexus in a particular state it is still your responsibility to pay sales tax on your purchases.

Pennsylvania sales or use tax may be due in connection with the purchase and delivery of tangible personal property to Pennsylvania individuals and businesses. The purchaser is required to file a use tax return if tax is due in connection with the purchase and delivery in the Commonwealth. This notice is required pursuant to the provisions of the Tax Reform Code of 1971. 72 P.S. § 7213.2. If you have a resale number please email Sue@RRAuction.com or fax to (603) 732-4288 a copy of your state resale certificate and you will be exempt from paying sales tax. Delivery; Shipping; and Handling Charges: Bidder is liable for shipping and handling. RR Auction is unable to combine purchases from other auctions or affiliates into one package for shipping purposes. Lots won will be shipped in a commercially reasonable time after payment in good funds for the merchandise and the shipping fees is received or credit extended, except when third-party shipment occurs. Bidder agrees that service and handling charges related to shipping items which are not pre-paid may be charged to a credit card on file with RR Auction. Successful international Bidders shall provide written shipping instructions, including specified Customs declarations, to RR Auction for any lots to be delivered outside of the United States. NOTE: Declaration value shall be the item’(s) hammer price and RR Auction shall use the correct harmonized code for the lot. Domestic Bidders on lots designated for third-party shipment must designate the common carrier, accept risk of loss, and prepay shipping costs. Title: Title shall not pass to the successful Bidder until all invoices are paid in full. It is the responsibility of the Bidder to provide adequate insurance coverage for the items once they have been delivered to a common carrier or third-


party shipper. Rights Reserved: RR Auction reserves the right to withdraw any lot before or at the time of the Auction, and/or to postpone the Auction of all or any lots or parts thereof, for any reason. RR Auction shall not be liable to any Bidder in the event of such withdrawal or postponement under any circumstances. RR Auction reserves the right to refuse to accept bids from anyone. Conducting the Auction: RR Auction reserves the right to postpone the Auction or any session thereof for a reasonable period of time for any reason whatsoever, and no Bidder or prospective Bidder shall have any claim as a result thereof, including consequential damages. RR Auction’s Discretion: RR Auction shall determine opening bids and bidding increments. RR Auction has the right in its absolute discretion to reject any bid in the event of dispute between Bidders or if RR Auction has doubt as to the validity of any bid, to advance the bidding at its absolute discretion and to determine the successful Bidder in the event of a dispute between Bidders, to continue the bidding or to reoffer and resell the lot in question. In the event of a dispute after the sale, RR Auction’s record of final sale shall be conclusive. RR Auction also may reject any bid if RR Auction decides either that any bid is below the reserve of the lot or article or that an advance is insufficient. Unless otherwise announced by RR Auction at the time of sale, no lots may be divided for the purpose of sale. Reserves: Lots may be subject to a reserve which is the confidential minimum price below which the lot will not be sold. Consignors may not bid on their own lots or property. RR Auction may, from time to time, bid on items that it does not own. Off-Site Bidding: Bidding by telephone, facsimile, online, or absentee bidding (advance written bids submitted by mail) are offered solely as a convenience and permitted subject to advance arrangements, availability, and RR Auction’s approval which shall be exercised at RR Auction’s sole discretion. Neither RR Auction nor its agents or employees shall be held liable for the failure to execute bids or for errors relating to any transmission or execution thereof. In order to be considered for off-site bidding in any manner, Bidders must comply with all of these Conditions of Sale and the terms contained on the Registration Form. RR Auction’s Remedies: Failure of the Bidder to comply with any of these Conditions of Sale or the terms of the Registration Form is an event of default. In such event, RR Auction may, in addition to any other available remedies specifically including the right to hold the defaulting Bidder liable for the Purchase Price or to charge and collect from the defaulting Bidder’s credit or debit accounts as provided for elsewhere herein: (a) cancel the sale, retaining any payment made by the Bidder as damages (the Bidder understands and acknowledges that RR Auction will be substantially damaged should such default occur, and that damages under sub-part (a) are necessary to compensate RR Auction for such damages); (b) resell the property without reserve at public auction or privately; (c) charge the Bidder interest on the Purchase Price at the rate of one and one-half percent (1.5%) per month or the highest allowable interest rate; (d) take any other action that RR Auction, in its sole discretion, deems necessary or appropriate to preserve and protect RR Auction’s rights and remedies. Should RR Auction resell the property, the original defaulting Bidder shall be liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price and all costs and expenses associated there with, including but not limited to warehousing, sales-related expenses, reasonable attorney fees and court costs, commissions, incidental damages and any other charges due hereunder which were not collected or collectable. In the event that such Bidder is the successful Bidder on more than one lot and pays less than the purchase price for the total lots purchased, RR Auction shall apply the payment received to such lot or lots that RR Auction, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate. If RR Auction does not exercise such discretion, the lots to which the payment shall be applied will be in descending order from the highest purchase price to the lowest. Any Bidder failing to comply with these Conditions of Sale shall be deemed to have granted RR Auction a security interest in, and RR Auction may retain as collateral such security for such Bidder’s obligations to RR Auction, any property in RR Auction’s possession owned by such Bidder. RR Auction shall have the benefit of all rights of a secured party under the Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) as adopted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Warranties: RR Auction does not provide any warranties to Bidders, whether expressed or implied, beyond those expressly provided in these Conditions of Sale. All property and lots are sold “as is” and “where is”. By way of illustration rather than limitation, neither RR Auction nor the Consignor makes any representation or warranty, expressed or implied, as to merchantability or fitness for intended use, condition of the property (including any condition report), correctness of description, origin, measurement, quality, rarity, importance, exhibition, relevance, attribution, source, provenance, date, authorship, condition, culture, genuineness, value, or period of the property. Additionally, neither RR Auction nor the Consignor makes any representation or warranty, expressed or implied, as to whether the Bidder acquires rights in copyright or other intellectual property (including exhibition or reproduction rights) or whether the property is subject to any limitations or other rights. RR Auction does not make any representation or warranty as to title. All descriptions, photographs, illustrations, and terminology including but not limited to words describing condition (including any condition reports requested by Bidder, see also Terminology), authorship, period, culture, source, origin, measurement, quality, rarity, provenance, importance, exhibition, and relevance, used in the Catalog, bill of sale, invoice, or anywhere else, represent a good faith effort made by RR Auction to fairly represent the lots and property offered for sale as to origin, date, condition, and other information contained therein; they are statements of opinion only. They are not representations or warranties and Bidder agrees and acknowledges that he or she shall not rely on them in determining whether or not to bid or for what price. Price estimates (which are determined well in advance of the Auction and are therefore subject to revision) and condition reports are provided solely as a convenience to Bidders and are not intended nor shall they be relied on by Bidders as statements, representations or warranties of actual value or predictions of final bid prices. Bidders are accorded the opportunity to inspect the lots and to otherwise satisfy themselves as to the nature and sufficiency of each lot prior to bidding, and RR Auction urges Bidders to avail themselves accordingly. All lots sold by RR Auction are accompanied by an Auction Certificate (“AC”). On any lot presented with an AC issued by RR Auction, the certification is only as to its attribution to the person or entity described or to the lot’s usage and only as explicitly stated therein (the “Certification of Authenticity”), to the exclusion of any other warranties, express or implied, including but not limited to those pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code. The Certification of Authenticity inures only to the original Bidder (as shown in RR Auction’s records). Bidder may not transfer, assign, or otherwise convey the Certification of Authenticity, and such purported transfer, assignment, or conveyance shall be null and void. The Certification of Authenticity is valid from date of the Auction in which Bidder was awarded the lot (the “Auction Date”) until five (5) years after the Auction Date, without exception. FIREARMS. RR Auction complies with all Federal and State rules and regulations relating to the purchasing, registration and shipping of firearms. A Bidder is required to provide appropriate documents and the payment of associated fees, if any. Bidder is responsible for providing a shipping address that is suitable for the receipt of a firearm. Limitation of Damages: In the event that RR Auction is prevented for any reason from delivering any property to Bidder, or Bidder is otherwise dissatisfied with the performance of RR Auction, the liability, if any, of RR Auction, shall be limited to, and shall not exceed, the amount actually paid for the property by Bidder. In no event shall RR Auction be liable for incidental, special, indirect, exemplary or consequential damages of any kind, including but not limited to loss of profits, value of investment or opportunity cost. Unauthorized Statements: Under no circumstances is any employee, agent or representative of RR Auction authorized by RR Auction to modify, amend, waive or contradict any of these Conditions of Sale, any term or condition set forth on a registration form, any warranty or limitation or exclusion of warranty, any term or condition in either the Registration Form or these Terms and Conditions regarding payment requirements, including but not limited to due date, manner of payment, and what constitutes payment in full, or any other term or condition contained in any documents issued by RR Auction unless such modification, amendment, waiver or contradiction is contained in a writing signed by all parties. Any statements, oral or written, made by employees, agents or representatives of RR Auction to Bidder, including statements regarding specific lots, even if such employee, agent or representative represents


that such statement is authorized, unless reduced to a writing signed by all parties, are statements of personal opinion only and are not binding on RR Auction, and under no circumstances shall be relied upon by Bidder as a statement, representation or warranty of RR Auction.

one employed by RR Auction or acting as agent or representative of RR Auction may amend, modify, waive or supersede the terms herein unless such amendment, waiver or modification is contained in a writing signed by all parties.

Bidder’s Remedies: Under no circumstance will RR Auction incur liability to a Bidder in excess of the purchase price actually paid.

If any section of these Conditions of Sale or any term or provision of any section is held to be invalid, void, or unenforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction, the remaining sections or terms and provisions of a section shall continue in full force and effect without being impaired or invalidated in any way.

This section sets forth the sole and exclusive remedies of Bidder in conformity with the Warranties and Limitation of Damages provisions of these Conditions of Sale, and is expressly in lieu of any other rights or remedies which might be available to Bidder by law. The Bidder hereby accepts the benefit of the Consignor’s warranty of title and any other representations and warranties made by the Consignor for the Bidder’s benefit. In the event that Bidder demonstrates in writing, in the sole discretion of RR Auction, that there was a breach of the Consignor’s warranty of title concerning a lot purchased by Bidder, RR Auction shall make demand upon the Consignor to pay to Bidder the Purchase Price (including any premiums, taxes, or other amounts paid or due to RR Auction). Should the Consignor not pay the Purchase Price to Bidder within thirty days after such demand, RR Auction shall disclose the identity of the Consignor to Bidder and assign to Bidder all of RR Auction’s rights against the Consignor with respect to such lot or property. Upon such disclosure and assignment, all responsibility and liability, if any, of RR Auction with respect to said lot or property shall automatically terminate. RR Auction shall be entitled to retain the premiums and other amounts paid to RR Auction - this remedy is as to the Consignor only. The rights and remedies provided herein are for the original Bidder only and they may not be assigned or relied upon by any transferee or assignee under any circumstances. If Bidder wishes to challenge the AC within the period of the Certification of Authenticity, Bidder must present written evidence that the lot is not authentic as determined by a known expert in the field. If RR Auction agrees that the lot is not as represented, Bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be a refund of their purchase price, with no other costs, liabilities or amounts recoverable. If RR Auction does not agree with the claim by Bidder, then the Parties shall follow the dispute resolution procedures of these Conditions of Sale. Any such challenge concerning an AC or Certification of Authenticity must, without any exception, be brought within one (1) year of Bidder’s notice to RR Auction of Bidder’s contention that the lot was not authentic, or six (6) years from the Auction Date, whichever is sooner. If the description of any lot in the Catalog is materially incorrect (e.g., gross cataloging error), the lot is returnable if returned within five (5) calendar days of receipt, and received by RR Auction no later than twenty-one (21) calendar days after the Auction Date. If there is any discrepancy between the description in the Catalog and the AC, then the description in the AC shall control. This paragraph shall constitute Bidder’s sole right with respect to the return of items, and no refunds shall be given for any items not returned to and received by RR Auction. NO RETURN OR REFUND OF ANY AUCTION LOT WILL BE CONSIDERED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN THESE CONDITIONS OF SALE. RR Auction’s Additional Services: For Bidders who do not remove purchased property from RR Auction’s premises, RR Auction, in its sole discretion and solely as a service and accommodation to Bidders, may arrange to have purchased lots packed, insured and forwarded at the sole request, expense, and risk of Bidder. RR Auction assumes no and disclaims all responsibility and liability for acts or omissions in such packing or shipping by RR Auction or other packers and carriers, whether or not recommended by RR Auction. RR Auction assumes no and disclaims all responsibility and liability for damage to frames, glass or other breakable items. Where RR Auction arranges and bills for such services via invoice, RR Auction will include an administration charge. Headings: Headings are for convenience only and shall not be used to interpret the substantive sections to which they refer. Entire Agreement: These Conditions of Sale constitute the entire agreement between the parties together with the terms and conditions contained in the Registration Form. They may not be amended, modified or superseded except in a signed writing executed by all parties. No oral or written statement by any-

Governing Law and Enforcement The Parties agree that any agreements between the Parties including but not limited to these Conditions of Sale are entered into in Boston, Massachusetts, no matter where Bidder is situated and no matter by what means or where Bidder was informed of the Auction and regardless of whether catalogs, materials, or other communications were received by Bidder in another location. The Parties agree that these Conditions of Sale, and any other related agreement(s) are governed by the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, without regard for its conflict of laws principles. The Parties agree that any dispute related to or arising out of these Conditions of Sale, or related to or arising out of any other related agreement(s) shall be submitted to confidential binding arbitration (the “Arbitration”) before a single Arbitrator of the American Arbitration Association (the “AAA”). The Parties agree that the Arbitration shall be conducted pursuant to the commercial rules of the AAA. In the event that the Parties cannot agree on the selection of the Arbitrator, then the Arbitrator shall be selected by the AAA. The prevailing Party in the Arbitration shall be entitled to recover all of its related costs, whether before or after the formal institution of the Arbitration, including but not limited to its reasonable attorneys’ fees and, if RR Auction prevails, the Buyer’s Premium as defined in these Conditions of Sale. The Parties agree that Bidder shall have no right to recover consequential or indirect damages, or lost profits damages. The Parties consent to the enforcement of the decision in the Arbitration pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act in either the courts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Except as provided in Bidder’s Remedies with regard to the Certification of Authenticity, any dispute, claim, cause of action related to or arising out of these Conditions of Sale or any other agreement(s) between the Parties must be brought within one (1) year of the acts, omissions or circumstances giving rise to the alleged claim, without exceptions. This provision is intended as a full, complete and absolute release of any claims after one (1) year of such acts, omissions or circumstances. The Parties agree further that these waiver provisions are intended to be binding on all parties in the event of any dispute, specifically including but not limited to third party claims and cross-actions brought by either RR Auction or Bidder. These provisions are consideration for the execution of these Conditions of Sale. The Bidder hereby agrees that RR Auction shall be entitled to present these Conditions of Sale to a court in any jurisdiction other than set forth in this paragraph as conclusive evidence of the Parties’ agreement, and the Parties further agree that the court shall immediately dismiss any action filed in such jurisdiction. Notwithstanding the foregoing, RR Auction may, in its sole discretion, enforce its rights pursuant to these Conditions of Sale in the courts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts rather than in an Arbitration related to or arising out of any Auction of an item sold for less than $10,000. This right shall relate to the individual item price, such that RR Auction may, in its sole discretion, enforce its rights pursuant to these Conditions of Sale in the courts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts rather than in an Arbitration for items that in the aggregate exceed $10,000. The prevailing Party in such a proceeding shall be entitled to recover all of its related costs, whether before or after the formal institution of the proceeding, including but not limited to its reasonable attorneys’ fees and, if RR Auction prevails, the Buyer’s Premium as defined in these Conditions of Sale. This right of enforcement is unique to RR Auction, and these Conditions of Sale are a waiver by the Bidder of any right to enforcement or adjudication outside of an Arbitration.


CONDUCT OF AUCTION Estimate Prices: In addition to descriptive information, each item in the Catalog sometimes includes a price range which reflects opinion as to the price expected at auction (the “Estimate Prices”). In other instances, Estimate Prices can be obtained by calling RR Auction at (603) 732-4280. The Estimate Prices are based upon various factors including prices recently paid at auction for comparable property, condition, rarity, quality, history and provenance. Estimate Prices are prepared well in advance of the sale and subject to revision. Estimates do not include the Buyer’s Premium or sales tax (see under separate heading). Owned or Guaranteed Property: RR Auction generally offers property consigned by others for sale at public auction; in very limited occasion, lots are offered that are the property of RR Auction. Before the Auction: Bidder may attend pre-sale viewing for all of RR Auction’s auctions at no charge. All property to be auctioned is usually on view for several days prior to the sale. Bidder is encouraged to examine lots thoroughly. Bidder may also request condition reports (see below). RR Auction’s staff are available at viewings and by appointment. Maximum Bids – All Auctions: To maximize Bidder’s chance of winning, RR Auction strongly encourages the use of maximum bids. RR Auction will then bid for Bidder until the lot reaches Bidder’s specified maximum. Maximum bids are strictly confidential. Placing arbitrary, non-incremental bids on lots with prior maximum bids may result in these lots being sold for less than 10% above the under Bidder’s bid. Successful Bids: The fall of RR Auction’s hammer indicates the final bid. RR Auction will record the paddle number of the Bidder. If Bidder’s salesroom or absentee bid is successful, Bidder will be notified after the sale by mailed or emailed invoice. Unsold Lots: If a lot does not reach the reserve, it is bought-in. In other words, it remains unsold and is returned to the Consignor. RR Auction has the right to sell certain unsold items after the close of the Auction. Such lots shall be considered sold during the Auction and all these Terms and Conditions shall apply to such sales including but not limited to the Buyer’s Premium, return rights, and disclaimers. Bidding—Timed Auction: Bidder may open, monitor, and/or raise bids at any time before the close of a lot through www.rrauction.com. RR Auction offers a callback service the day of the Auction, but Bidder is responsible for supplying a correct telephone number(s) where Bidder can be reached until the Auction closes. Bidder must request this service in writing. RR Auction will make reasonable efforts to ensure that Bidders who request a callback are contacted if outbid; however, RR Auction does not guarantee this service and it is merely a courtesy and not an enforceable right. The auctioneer may also execute a bid on behalf of the consignor to protect the reserve, either by entering a bid in response to salesroom, telephone or absentee bids. Under no circumstances will the auctioneer place any bid on behalf of the consignor above the reserve. The auctioneer will not specifically identify bids placed on behalf of the consignor to protect the reserve. To ensure proper registration, those Bidders intending to bid via the Internet must visit www.RRauction.com and register accordingly at least one full day prior to the actual auction. Winning bidders will be notified by RR Auction. RR Auction is not responsible or liable for any problems, delays, or any other issues or problems resulting out of use of the Internet generally or specifically, including but not limited to transmission, execution or processing of bids. Any Bidder may bid on any lot prior to 6 pm EST/EDT. At that time, an extended bidding period goes into effect. If Bidder has not bid on a lot before 6 pm EST/EDT, Bidder may not bid on that lot after 6 pm EST/EDT. Only those Bidders who have placed bids on a lot before 6 pm EST/EDT will be allowed to bid on that lot after 6 pm EST/EDT. If Bidder is the only Bidder on a lot at 6 pm EST/EDT, that lot is awarded to Bidder. During the extended bidding period, a lot will remain open only to those who bid on that lot prior to 6 pm EST/EDT. All lots WITHOUT an opening bid at 6 pm EST/EDT will remain OPEN to ALL Bidders until 7 pm EST/EDT or until they

receive their first bid. These lots will close immediately upon receipt of a bid or at 7 pm EST/EDT, whichever comes first. For all lots that are active after 7 pm EST/EDT, bidding will remain open until 30 minutes pass without a bid being placed on THAT lot (the “30 Minute Rule”). The 30 Minute Rule is applied on a PER LOT BASIS; each lot in the Auction closes individually based on bidding activity after 7 pm EST/EDT. On a PER LOT BASIS, the 30 minute timer will reset each time a bid is placed after 7 pm EST/EDT. If Bidder is the high Bidder, raising Bidder’s maximum bid will NOT reset the timer. RR Auction reserves the right to close the Auction at any time at its sole discretion. Bidding - Internet – Live Auction: Bidder may open, monitor, and/or raise bids at any time before the close of a lot through www.rrauction.com. RR Auction offers a callback service the day of the Auction, but Bidder is responsible for supplying a correct telephone number(s) where Bidder can be reached until the Auction closes. Bidder must request this service in writing. RR Auction will make reasonable efforts to ensure that Bidders who request a callback are contacted if outbid; however, RR Auction does not guarantee this service and it is merely a courtesy and not an enforceable right. To ensure proper registration, those Bidders intending to bid via the Internet must visit www.RRauction.com and register accordingly at least one full day prior to the actual auction. Winning bidders will be notified by RR Auction. RR Auction is not responsible or liable for any problems, delays, or any other issues or problems resulting out of use of the Internet generally or specifically, including but not limited to transmission, execution or processing of bids. Property is auctioned in consecutive numerical order, as it appears in the catalog. The auctioneer will accept bids from those present in the salesroom or absentee bidders participating by telephone, internet or by written bid left with RR Auction in advance of the auction. The auctioneer may also execute a bid on behalf of the consignor to protect the reserve, either by entering a bid in response to salesroom, telephone or absentee bids. Under no circumstances will the auctioneer place any bid on behalf of the consignor above the reserve. The auctioneer will not specifically identify bids placed on behalf of the consignor to protect the reserve. During live Auctions, internet bids can be placed in real time through one or more of the following Third Party services: www.liveauctioneers.com, www. invaluable.com and www.icollector.com. RR Auction is not responsible or liable for any problems, delays, or any other issues or problems resulting out of use of the Internet generally or specifically, including but not limited to transmission, execution or processing of bids. RR Auction treats any third-party site bids as floor or telephone bids. Floor bids and telephone bids are always considered first over third party sites bids, and floor bids are considered earlier than telephone bids. All RR Auction lots purchased through the third party sites carry an additional Buyer’s Premium. Miscellaneous: Agreements between Bidders and Consignors to effectuate a non-sale of an item at Auction, inhibit bidding on a consigned item to enter into a private sale agreement for said item, or to utilize RR Auction’s Auction to obtain sales for non-selling consigned items subsequent to the Auction, are strictly prohibited. If a subsequent sale of a previously consigned item occurs in violation of this provision, RR Auction reserves the right to charge Bidder the applicable Buyer’s Premium and Consignor a Seller’s Commission as determined for each auction venue and by the terms of the seller’s agreement. Acceptance of these Terms and Conditions qualifies Bidder as a client who has consented to be contacted by RR Auction in the future. In conformity with “do-not-call” regulations promulgated by the Federal or State regulatory agencies, participation by the Bidder is affirmative consent to being contacted at the phone number shown in his application and this consent shall remain in effect until it is revoked in writing. RR Auction may from time to time contact Bidder concerning sale, purchase, and auction opportunities available. Rules of Construction: RR Auction presents properties in a number of collectible fields, and as such, specific venues have promulgated supplemental Terms and Conditions. Nothing herein shall be construed to waive the general Conditions of Sale by these additional rules and shall be construed to give force and effect to the rules in their entirety.


RR IS TRAVELING TO YOU!

Louis Bollman Vice President of Sports

Joseph Del Grippo Vintage Sportscard Specialist

SET UP A TIME TO MEET OUR EXPERTS A FEW CITIES WE ARE STOPPING AT: New York, NY Los Angeles, CA Chicago, IL Houston, TX Phoenix, AZ Philadelphia, PA

Columbus, OH Miami, FL Nashville, TN Seattle, WA Richmond, VA Las Vegas, NV

Don’t see your city? Call and we will stop to see you too!

Our Sports experts will be traveling from coast to coast using their 70 years experience curating our next sale. Same-day travel anywhere in New England and Tri-State area for qualifying collections.

$5 Million Available in Advances

(800) 937-3880 Sports@RRAuction.com


WE ARE CURRENTLY SEEKING CONSIGNMENTS FOR MANY OF OUR EXCITING SALES

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LE

RA R

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T. 1976 ES

REMARKA

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SPORTS OLYMPICS PRESIDENTS ANIMATION

www.RRAuction.com

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(603) 732-4280

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Boston, Massachusetts


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