Old Manuscripts
Asked to name the most priceless antique in the world,
artworks like Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, or
Michelangelo's David, readily come to mind. Arguably, a
badly faded 24 1/4" by 29 3/4" manuscript drafted by Thomas
Jefferson between June 11, and June 28, 1776, belongs in that
same class.
Valuable antique manuscripts constitute the most discarded and
least understood category in all of antiques. For example, the
Declaration of Independence reproduced in so many of our
history books is a copy itself. That clear image is a
commissioned print made by engraver William J. Stone in 1823
because the original, now maintained under the best archival
conditions in the Rotunda of the National Archives Building in
Washington, DC, had already begun to deteriorate.
Manuscripts are collected for their content and/or signatures.
A document with John Hancock's distinctive signature can fetch
$5,000. George Washington fetches about $4,000. A check signed
by Ronald Reagan is worth around $300. A Charles Lindbergh
letter can bring $1,000. Babe Ruth sells for around $500. I
paid $90 for note Mickey Mantle signed on an Oxford,
Connecticut restaurant napkin. Nixon's signature brings $150.
A singed Jesse James note could bring $7,000. Ben Franklin
books around $2,500, and Benedict Arnold is worth $6,000.
If you're wondering why an outlaw and a traitor's signatures
fetch more than Ben Franklin's, it's more than just rarity.
Antique paper collectors seem to attach special sentiment to
articles associated to traitors, robbers, murderers, and other
scoundrels. They're also fond of documents describing freaks
of nature, horrific accidents, famous disasters and other such
subject matter. "Ephemera" collectors can be a little weird.
Years ago, people used to cut famous signatures from documents
and save them. While a "clipped" signature is still
collectible, it is not as valuable as a signed manuscript,
photo, book, etc.. Fakes have always been a plague on the
market. Remember the Mormon Papers, and the infamous
Hitler Diary.
Just as signatures are collected by category: American
presidents, athletes, New York Yankees, famous woman,
scientists, artists, writers, aviators, inventors,
entertainers, signers of the Declaration, etc., so too are
manuscripts collected by content. Lovers of the ocean are
often attracted to ship and whaling logs. Civil war journals
and letters are in great demand. Battle accounts of this
century's World Wars will no doubt be highly collectible in
future years.
Old folded documents have a way of appearing in the cubby
holes of desks, behind picture frames, and packed away in
boxes and suitcases. Consider all the yellowed letters and
journals that lie in wait: undiscovered poems and songs, rare
scientific notes, how a battle was lost, how a heart was won.
Whether you're an antique treasure hunter or a dedicated
manuscript collector, it pays to do the paperwork. By the way,
if you happen upon a parchment note with the ink-quilled
signature of Button Gwinnett on it, don't throw it away. The
Georgia pig farmer is the most sought after of all the
"signers" (referring to the Declaration). It's also worth in
the neighborhood of $20,000! I told you manuscript collectors
are weird.
by
AntiqueTalk.com
Reprinted with permission
Copyright by Wayne Mattox |
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