Thursday, December 31, 2009

"Cambridge Ripper" Arrested For Plundering Valuable Books

A former Cambridge University student has been arrested after selectively gutting horticultural volumes worth £50,000 ($100,000US) from the Royal Horticultural Society's London library.

William Jacques, 40, who has no fixed address, will appear in custody at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court. He was arrested on Christmas Day in Selby, North Yorkshire, after more than two years on the run.

The former Cambridge University student is alleged to have stolen 13 volumes from the Royal Horticultural Society's London library. Scotland Yard said he disappeared after being released on bail by police in April 2007.

Jacques was accused of stealing Nouvelle Iconographies des Camellias by Ambroise Verschaffelt.

The volumes contained an array of colored plates of camellias by the 19th century Belgian author and explanatory text. It is alleged Jacques stole them by signing in to the library under the false name of "Mr Santoro" and then hiding them under his jacket.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Old Is Good (We Keep Saying) As Steam Train Rescues Stranded Passengers

Electric trains running between Ashford and Dover came to a standstill today as cold weather in the area numbed the electric rail and left a hundred passengers stranded.

Until a Darlington-built Tornado - Britain's first mainline steam engine - announced itself with a cheery whistle and took the grateful passengers home "in style."

The weather-related disruption included three days of cancellations for Eurostar services through the Channel Tunnel.

Tornado, a £3m Peppercorn class A1 Pacific based at the National Railway Museum in York, was in the South East for one day, offering "Christmas meal" trips from London to Dover.

Its "Cathedrals Express" service, the last mainline journey in its first year of operations, was about to depart when staff heard about the stranded passengers.

About 100 people were offered free seats, according to Mark Allatt, chairman of The A1 Steam Locomotive Trust - the charity which built Tornado.

"It was a nice way to finish for Christmas, though I think some of the rescued passengers didn't realise they'd even been travelling on a steam train until they got off."

Mr Allatt, who was on the service at the time, said he only saw a handful of other trains between London and Dover throughout Monday.

He added: "If any of the train operators want to modernise their services by using steam trains, I would be happy to give them a quote."

Notch one for the "old days."

Monday, December 14, 2009

"Miracle On The Hudson" Pilot's Cap Passes Under The Hammer For $5,800


Whether you're tired of all the foofraw surrounding the helluva good job Capt. Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger did aboard U.S. Airways flight 1549 or can't get enough of the hero captain, it was interesting to see that Sully's flight cap was just auctioned off for $5,800 - on eBay.

The signed cap, stripped of its U.S. Airways insignia, passed this morning, with all the money from the sale promised to two local schools. The good captain is a class act and a local boy and we're glad things went well for him and his passengers that fateful day in January, but Antiqueswest thinks the least they could have done would be to throw in a bag of those airline peanuts to sweeten the deal.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

"No Wonder Grandma Was Always So Happy... And Hungry"

Antiqueswest has found some interesting things in old things that have come our way, including gold coins and an Imperial Russian jetton in an old desk; a very active rat in an old cannon tube, and some Confederate documents behind an old picture.

But this was an interesting find...

Hey, it happens. What are you gonna do?

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Antique Pistol Used in Massachussetts Stickup

Two Springfield, MA teens were charged with using what turned out to be an antique pistol during an attempted robbery of a bicyclist Wednesday.

Tyriesse J. Jackson, 17, and a 16-year-old juvenile whose name was not released were charged with armed assault with intent to rob. Jackson also had an outstanding warrant.

A bicyclist told police two teens approached him and tried to rob him, displaying a pistol in his waistband. Police recovered the gun in the home of the 16-year-old and described it as an antique, single-action handgun of unknown make and caliber.

Sorry circumstances and Antiqueswest hopes Mssr's Jackson and "unnamed juvenile" get what's coming to them but we'd also like to get a look at that pistol!

Sunday, November 22, 2009

"Origin Of The Species" Found On Shelf In Oxford Loo

You can pick up many things in old English lavatories, germs being one. But one recent visitor to an Oxford, England WC found something quite beguiling - an 18th Century first edition copy of Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species."

Christie's said today that the book - one of a run of 1,200 first printed in 1858 - had been on a toilet bookshelf at a family home for some time. The book will be auctioned on Tuesday, the 150th anniversary of the publication of the famous work. Christie's said the book is likely to sell for 60,000 pounds ($99,000).

Darwin's "The Origin of Species" outlined his theory of natural selection, the foundation for the modern understanding of evolution.

That's pretty weighty stuff for a "loo-side" read.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

EBAY Service Disrupted, Shoppers And Sellers Howl

EBay Inc.'s main e-commerce sites suffered from sporadic failures on Saturday, limiting the ability of shoppers to search for products on the site in the lead-up to the crucial holiday shopping season and prompting hundreds of complaints from sellers.

Sellers say they first began noticing problems with eBay's search system on Saturday morning. At 11:17 a.m. Pacific time, the company posted a note on its announcement board stating they were aware of the problem - which intensified through the day.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

More Money Than Cents At Madoff Sell-Off

Call it "Just Desserts," or "Revenge Served Sweet," but victim's of Bernard Madoff's paper-thin financial scam caught a break this week as the last of the "Wizard of Wall Street's" assets were sold off to help make reparations to those he defrauded.

Gaston & Sheehan auctioned off antiques, personal items and expensive geegaws for as much as ten times behind their appraised value as the Madoff mystique - still a mystery to us, with the namesake doing life behind bars - continues to pull in the big bucks.

Saturday's government auction of items seized from Bernard and Ruth Madoff's New York residences, expected to bring in $500,000, brought in more than $1 million.

Lots of more than 200 items, from jewelry and watches to sports memorabilia and artwork, nearly sold out in four hours of brisk bidding. A pair of platinum Art Deco Cartier onyx and diamond earrings quickly sparked a bidding war on the floor, going for $70,000, more than 10 times its low estimate. Ms. Madoff's pre-Victorian era diamond dangle earrings, expected to bring in between $14,300 and $21,400, fetched $70,000 and drew a round of applause.

The money goes toward repaying the victims of Madoff's multi-billion-dollar Ponzi scheme, minus an undisclosed fee by the auctioneer.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Metal Thieves Pilfer Cemetary Cannon For Scap

The scurrilous brand of night-prowling metal thieves known for stripping copper cable out of commercial refrigerators and selling it to black-market recyclers for scrap may have claimed a historic cannon this week.

We obviously have a love of old things and we find this sort of thing particularly reprehensible, but it seems a crew of meth tweakers - or perhaps something more than that - spent some time prying a 1,500-pound Dahlgren gun off its mounts at a Vallejo, CA cemetery and made off with it.

The Civil War-era Naval Dahlgren cannon similar to the one we have pictured was discovered missing from a battery of others in the Sunrise Memorial Cemetery this week. Cemetery operator Buck Kamphausen says the surviving examples have since been removed and stored in safe location.

We have heard of cases back east where thieves, either stealing for scrap metal content of the guns or for well-heeled buyers who like to have 12-pound Napoleons protecting their yards, have backed trucks up to "town square cannons" and made off with them.

This theft is particularly disturbing because it took some spectacular engineering to make off with their prize.

"They took an A-frame to it to take it out of the ground," Kamphausen told a local reporter. "They dug around it enough to loosen it from the ground." This is the second cannon theft Kamphausen knows of in Vallejo in recent years, he said. One was stolen about 18 months ago from another local cemetery, he said.

Sunrise's cannon memorial is believed to have been erected in 1906 in its Spanish-American War section.

Monday, November 2, 2009

"Say, Buddy, How Much Ya Want For That Mahmoud Mokhtar Garden Sculpture?"


A bronze sculpture of a woman carrying a water urn had rested in a Cleveland, Ohio man's garden for years. It attracted some attention, with at least one dealer offering him $3,000 for it.

The homeowner is glad he said no, apparently, as the bronze by Egyptian artist Mahmoud Mokhtar went on to sell at auction for $118,000 - not bad considering he'd inherited the artwork when he bought his house. No one knows for sure how long it has been there, at least since 1931 - when it was poured.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Ashes Of Last Known Titanic Survivor Scattered At Southampton Docks


End of an era when manners and upbringing counted for something: the ashes of the last Titanic survivor have been scattered at the English port where the ship began its ill-fated maiden voyage in 1912.

Millvina Dean, who was 9 weeks old when her parents took her aboard the ship, died May 31 at age 97.

Her ashes were scattered on Saturday by her partner, Bruno Nordmanis, on the water at Southampton Docks in southern England.

About 150 people, including members of the British Titanic Society and friends of Dean, gathered for the ceremony. David Hill, of the British Titanic Society, called her a "lovely lady, and anyone who met her would say exactly the same."

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Belgian Farmers Get Udderly Out Of Control During Milk Price Protest In Brussels

Antiqueswest has covered more than a few full-blown riots in its day, and we know that demonstrators can get "creative" when it comes to finding something to fling at a policeman.

We've seen rocks, steel pellets, molotov cocktails and chunks of concrete hurled at riot police during these things, but we're hearing of a new tactic out there these days, something more insidious even than the bags of dog stuff anarchists hurled at coppers - and anyone else they didn't like - during protests over Operation Desert Storm.

But this, wow, this is something really terrifying... the officer on the receiving end is undoubtedly undergoing counseling as we speak.

Antique Hoaxes: Somewhere, "Jay Slaven" Is Laughing Like The Dickens


There have been a number of great antique hoaxes through history, pranksters who know a certain piece will outlive them and that a story well told could send the unwitting on a merry chase long after the prankster is gone.

Chalk it up to the human need to reach out and tickle someone from beyond the grave, and antiques can be the perfect conveyance.

Take Patty Henken of Illinois. Patty thought her ship had come in when she pried off the seat of an old chair she was working on and a typewritten note fluttered alluringly to the ground.

The note, signed by a "Chauncey Wolcott," instructed the finder of the note to a hidden hoard of gold coins - stashed at a residence long ago and waiting for the person sharp enough to find it.

Patty did some quick mental calculations on the price of gold today, found a backhoe operator and rented some ground penetrating radar and went to the location, a vacant lot. She began to dig, and dig.

But an old friend of a deceased newspaper classified ad employee raised the alarm, identifying Chauncey as a fellow employee and a man without a pot to p... bury gold coins in. Patty knew she'd been had when the author of her note was further identified as John "Jay" Slaven - a local prankster known for his practical jokes.

It seemed Jay liked to leave typewritten notes in odd places around town, and Patty was not his only victim. As she calculated her out of pocket expenses from her "treasure hunt" it was revealed that the location where her pot of gold was meant to reside was actually the site of Slaven's home. He died in 1976.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Company Works To Bring "Old Fort Laramie" Back To Life In 3D


An Orinda, CA firm using 3D Laser technology to scan historic sites and "bring them back to life" is currently in the field in Wyoming and capturing the physical imprint of one of the West's most significant structures - old Fort Laramie.

Founded in 1849 when the U.S. Army, then a ragtag collection of scouts, frontiersman and adventurers led by a few "regulars," bought a former fur trader's outpost called "Fort John" and began to build a military settlement along the Oregon Trail.

Contrary to popular misconception and Hollywood B-movies, the fort was never walled nor did it have turreted blockhouses for Indians to scale and set fire to. It relied on its garrison and field pieces to keep "hostiles" at bay - until 1854, at least, when a detachment of soldiers was lured out of the fort and killed by Plains Indians upset by the intrusion of emmigrants then flooding into the West.

Now, 160 years later, CyArk of Orinda, CA is tracing the footsteps of cavalry soldiers, fortune seekers, settlers, and Mormons fleeing persecution in the East and taking painstaking 3D "portraits" of the old fort and environs to digitally preserve the Fort Laramie National Historic Site.

Working in partnership with the National Park Service, CyArk hopes to provide more accurate documentation of one of the last vestiges of the Old West for future use by conservators, researchers, the NPS staff, and the public.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

No Buyer For Samson The T-Rex - Yet


Sampson, a fossilized Tyrannosaurus Rex with a great pedigree, failed to sell today and was brought in, though auctioneers Bonhams & Butterfields say they'll find a good home for the "Thunder Lizard" soon.

A number of institutions and individuals have expressed interest in the old bag of bones, which Bonhams hoped would bring $6 million when it went up for bid today in Las Vegas.

High bid today was $3.7 million.

Paleontologists say 170 bones discovered 17 years ago in South Dakota represent more than half the skeleton of a 40-foot-long, 7 ton dinosaur that lived 66 million years ago.

A similar fossil sold for $8.3 million in 1997.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Ultimate Home Defense Weapon - The Katana, Hopkins Student Kills Burglar With Sword


Beautiful. Lethal. We love and collect them - the old ones crafted with love and honored by time.

But today a student at Hopkins University used a katana - and probably not one of those late-night Home Shopping Crappo Models - in a to-the-death fight with a burglar. He won.

Antiqueswest is reminded of a tale told by a Pacific War veteran of WWII, who talked about securing a Marine fighting position overrun the night before by Japanese forces and finding an officer's longsword cleaved neatly into the cooling jacket of a .30 caliber machine gun.

The awesome striking power of these swords came into play in the 21st Century early this morning, when a student named John P. (we won't use his last name) confronted a burglar who had just broken into his student housing for the second time in two days.

Apparently the burglar, who has a lengthy record, charged the student who struck a defensive blow that tore into the man's torso and almost completely severed his right hand. The man died of exanguanation as Baltimore Northern Police District officers responded to the scene.

It appears he had burgled the same residence a day earlier.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Antique Dealer Uses Craigslist - And Regrets It

We're not big believers in the "big box" online sales components called Ebay and Craigslist.

Friends left Ebay in droves when their rates climbed and their vetting process slid and now no one we know uses it unless they want a cheap knockoff Tiffany bracelet or rebel belt buckle.

So when those same friends suggested Craigslist as a free alternative to the Ebay/Paypal money machine we thought: "What the heck..."

We posted a saddle. A nice old highback with some history, and kept the description informative and straightforward. We weren't prepared for the response - which was heavy - or the tenor of the replies, which were just this side of insane.

We can't tell you what the first reply said, it was incredibly profane and disconnected. For an instant we considered writing something like "please take your meds" but then saw little sense in that and said nothing.

That didn't stop them. Three Nigerian wire-transfer scammers tried next, promising to send a check they had "mistakenly" cut for three times the price of the saddle if I would wire the difference to them in Lagos. This is pretty much the oldest scam in the book and I was going to ignore them, too, until one guy - probably sitting in his shorts and flip-flops in an internet cafe in Lagos - pushed it and asked when the wired funds would arrive.

We told him to come by the San Francisco field office of the FBI, International Fraud Division (no such thing) and we would personally hand over the money. That resulted in the following email message:

"*uck You You Stupid American Fool."

Then there were the Craigslist "experts." These are people who feel free to weigh in on your post, telling you where you've misidentified your item and how you're a moron for posting it at the suggested price. Oh, and by the way, they'll by it for $25.

We've since heard there are some frustrated individuals out there who like to string sellers along, asking seemingly pertinent questions and attempting to draw them into a meeting to consummate the transaction - and then not show up.

Lovely people.

Friday, September 4, 2009

It Wasn't Us... We Only Fire Our Cannons At Dusk


Well, and at the neighborhood rowdies, of course... but only grape and never solid shot.

It seems a Pennsylvania history buff accidentally fired a 2-pound cannonball through the wall of his neighbor's home yesterday.

William Maser, 54, fired a cannonball Wednesday evening outside his home in Georges Township that ricocheted and hit a house 400 yards away.

The cannonball, about two inches in diameter, smashed through a window and a wall before landing in a closet. Authorities say nobody was hurt.

State police charged Maser with reckless endangerment, criminal mischief and disorderly conduct.

No one answered the phone Friday at Maser's home. He tells WPXI-TV recreating 19th century cannons is a longtime hobby. He says he is sorry and he will stop shooting them on his property, about 35 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

14K Gold San Francisco Sea Captain's Pocket Watch w/14K Gold Tiger Shark Tooth Fob


Here's a nice set for your next formal outting. A beautiful 14K Gold American Waltham Watch Co. hunter pocket watch, 17 Jewels and bearing the retail mark of "M. Farber, 954 Market Street, S.F."

Came from a maritime estate auction and it just talks nautical history with its 14K chain and Tiger Shark fob. It's a runner. Ca. 1901.

Price: $4,000.00 ($4,500 w/the clamshell watch rest that came with it)

Saturday, August 15, 2009

You Can Have My Musket When You Pry It From My Wall...


As someone who likes antique guns and has no need for their modern variations, I am constantly amazed how willingly people are to lump antique gun collectors in with modern gun fanciers, collectors, and dealers.

We make the distinction, pre-1898 is antique - anything after that is of no interest to us. But that has not stopped the calls, from the same people using different names and always calling for exotic modern weaponry of the type likely to end up in some nutbag's hands during a bloodbath on the evening news.

We feel these calls are, without a doubt, from government agencies charged with controlling the trafficking of modern arms. We have no problem with that, but identify yourselves and we won't have to play the usual games.

"Is this the gun store?"

"This is Antiqueswest.com, what can I do for you?"

"Do you guys sell AKs?"

"Only antique guns, my friend, sorry."

"How 'bout a Desert Eagle? Wanna buy a Desert Eagle?"

"Only antique firearms, bud. Percussion. Have anything old?"

"Oh. How 'bout an MP5?"

We get about three of these calls a week. If it's the ATF (which is fine, by the way, most of our customers are ATF or FBI folks and they're great people) they're wasting a lot of precious time on us.

For the record: "Antique only at Antiqueswest.com." M'kay?

Now, that's not to say the Feds aren't right to be checking, especially in light of the recent arrest of a Glassboro, New Jersey collector/dealer who was arrested Thursday after ramming a police cruiser in the parking lot of a Glassboro bowling alley during a sting operation. The dealer tried to sell a 37 mm projectile launcher to an undercover officer, probably one of the guys who keeps calling us.

This dealer allegedly sold six weapons to undercover state troopers that were far from antique over the last few weeks, including an Israeli military assault rifle, a Marlin "Bull Pup" 9 mm assault rifle and a Norinco SKS .556 caliber.

So, we appreciate the work of the Federal government in a lot of ways, especially in their efforts to rid our streets of modern guns built for mass killing, but we don't like these things - they don't move us like an old gun with a lot of history behind it.

Just so we're clear. And no, we don't have any 37mm anti-tank weapons. Okay?

Sheesh.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Circuitous Route For Antique San Francisco Fire Badges


If you've been in this game for awhile you come to realize that the things we pursue sometimes take circuitous routes before they find their way home to us.

Here's a recent example. If you know us you know we have a special thing for California police and fire badges. We've found them in a variety of unique and interesting places, but recently had the lesson driven home again when we took a call from a gent in Pittsburgh, PA.

It seems he'd inherited a couple of old San Francisco Fire Department buzzers, one a retirement badge and the other a San Francisco Fire Association badge, presented in 1925. Gold with ruby and diamond embellishments and lovely from the look of them.

We chatted and arranged to have them shipped back to the San Francisco Bay Area for inspection and purchase. The badges belonged to Capt. William J. Kenealey, a rootin-tootin' firefighting man who went five rounds with Jim Corbett and pulled off more than one rescue in his long and storied career.

We were able to determine this because along with the badges came a rather large box filled with correspondence, clippings and other items - including his log book. Great reading, and finally home again.

Nice to have you back in the San Francisco Bay Area, Capt. Kenealey. Welcome home.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Bass Fisherman Lands World War II Dive Bomber


Bass fisherman Duane Johnson was looking for a lunker with his "fish finder" in San Diego's Lower Otay Reservoir when he caught the outline of something much bigger - an SB2C-4 Helldiver in 85 feet of water.

Duane made a phone call when he got his bass boat back on dry land and a team of historians and conservators was assembled to recover the Helldiver and land it in a local museum.

The plane was forced into a water landing in the reservoir back in 1945 during a practice bombing. The crew made it out but the Navy, faced with wartime priorities, decided to leave the aircraft in place.

Until Duane came along, that is.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Antique Cars - And Their Owners - Not Doing Well On Modern Roadways


In the past, a convoy of antique cars whirring down the Interstate with their occupants waving to any and all who gave them the universal "thumbs up," was a quaint sight - a vestige of a long-gone period in our automotive history.

These days, however, as more people flood our highways in overpowered and overbuilt cars with power plants that would have left Henry Ford agape - an older car is merely an obstruction. Several have been hit in recent weeks, and their occupants killed.

A 62-year-old Bowie man and his 10-year-old daughter were killed Tuesday night in Howard County, Maryland when the antique car they were riding in was struck from behind and overturned on Interstate 70 near the Route 97 exit in Lisbon.

Witnesses told police that the man's Model A was travelling at about 50 mph when it was hit from behind and overturned. The car was in the slow lane and carried appropriate signage advising other motorists that it couldn't go as fast as they could.

It was the second fatal accident involving a vintage automobile in the area in less than a week. A week earlier, a 73-year-old Gambrills man was killed when his 1936 Ford was hit head-on on Defense Highway, police said.

It seems modern motorists may have higher expectations of older cars, expecting them to react as swiftly as their modern cousins. The disconnect is frightening. But it seems that modern society has somewhere to go and likes to get there at Warp speed.

Our condolences to the owners of these old treasures and to their families.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Father's Day Finds - Great Treasures That Have Come Our Way

Not all found on Father's Day, of course, as we have to take a break sometime. But close enough.

You know that feeling you get when you walk in on something nice, perfect color and nicked in a nice way that lets you know it has been around awhile and lived an exciting life - and no one else knows what it is?

For that minute it's yours and you move to it as if you're in a dream, heart pounding, the light glinting off the surfaces in just the right way as the maker's hand begins to reveal more and more of itself the nearer you get.

Here was one of those, a nice plains Indian hatchet pipe, found in a local house one afternoon. We were just taking it easy, moving through the house and having fun, staying away from the shriekers and the shovers looking to shell out fifty cents for something they could sell at the flea market. A man ahead of us picked it up, snorted at it derisively and snorted again when he looked at the price tag.

"Reproduction," he said, moving off to the Depression Glass.

And then it was in our hand, warm and full, the haft just perfect and shaped 150 years ago, rocker engraving on the hatchet blade, everything just the way it should be. Paying at the door and looking up in time to see an Imperial German regimantal banner, hanging in a foyer wall.

"I'll take that, too," you say, heart thumping - and you know it's going to be a great day. Happy Father's Day!

Saturday, June 6, 2009

"You Are About To Embark On A Great Crusade..."


Remembering all those who slogged ashore on this day 65 years ago - and those who still rest there.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Video of Antique Thieves In Action, Do You Know Them?



Police in Boston released surveillance video of two men they say are responsible for a break-in at a South Boston condo building over the Memorial Day weekend - and helping themselves to jewelry, antiques, and artwork.

The victims said they had been away for the weekend. No signs of forced entry were detected. A $1,000 reward is being offered for information leading to the recovery of the stolen items.

If you know these guys, it may be time to "drop a dime" to the police.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Archeology Ace "Chip" Stanish Says Ninety Five Percent of Ebay's Antiquities Offerings Are Fake


You want a KKK pocket knife or a bogus Tiffany ring - Ebay's the place for you.

Charles "Chip" Stanish, director of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, says archaeologists were initially "terrified" that Ebay's arrival in the online antiquities market would send demand for ancient objects sky-high and more looters into sacred spaces in search of fodder.

But that didn't happen, not because of Ebay's self-policing (which most admit is pretty poor) but rather because most of the fraudsters selling there quickly realized they didn't need the real deal - they only needed the cheap knockoffs already proliferating on the tourist market.

In the May/June issue of Archaeology magazine Stanish goes on to say:"Now, 95 percent of the stuff you're looking at on eBay is not real."

An Ebay spokesman says that if fake antiquities were as rampant as Stanish says, buyers would complain and eBay would police the problem, but that it's not a problem they "hear about."

Hmmm.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Millvina Dean, Last Survivor of the "Titanic," Dies at 97


What an amazing start to a young life. Millvina Dean, who as an infant passenger aboard the Titanic was lowered into a lifeboat in a canvas mail sack and lived to become the ship’s last survivor, died Sunday at a nursing home in Southampton, the English port from which the Titanic embarked on its fateful voyage.

She was 97 and had been in poor health for some time, followers say.

The youngest of the ship’s 705 survivors, Ms. Dean was only 9 weeks old when the Titanic hit an iceberg in waters off Newfoundland on the night of April 14, 1912, setting off what was then considered the greatest maritime disaster in history.

She survived with her mother, Georgetta, and 2-year-old brother when they, like many other survivors, were picked up by the liner Carpathia and taken to New York.

Her father, Bertram Dean, was among more than 1,500 passengers and crew members who died in the sinking. A brother survived the sinking and was later reunited with his family. He died in 1997.

Plucky and profound, Ms. Dean attributed her father's death the night of the sinking to the fact that the family had been travelling in steerage and were not given the same chances for survival as more advantaged passengers - though many of them perished, as well.

A mail sack believed to have been the one the crew of the Titanic used to lower her into a lifeboat and safety was later found to have come into the family well after the sinking and could not have come from the ship. Nevertheless, it later sold for $2,000 as Ms. Dean auctioned her possessions to pay for her care.

"Just think," she once said. "If it had been from the ship it would have been worth a hundred thousand pounds."

Actors who portrayed passengers aboard the ill-fated ship in a hit movie about the sinking later contributed to a fund created to help Ms. Dean in her later years.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Reconciliation At Mountain Meadows - Mormon Massacre Is History

One of the darkest secrets of the Old West was brought into the light and examined this weekend by descendants of a California-bound wagon train which met its end at the hands of Mormon militia and Paiute Indians at a place called Mountain Meadows in 1857.

Covered up in a conspiracy which put the blame for the deaths of 120 men, women, and children on local Indians and shook the Mormon faith to its very core, the Mountain Meadows Massacre has been the subject of heated debate, accusation, and retribution for 150 years.

Descendants from both sides of the tragedy met some 30 miles north of St. George, Utah to commemorate the incident Saturday. An honor guard in period uniforms fired a salute in tribute of the victims, cut down by bayonets and bowie knives in a dark plot hatched by Mormon extremists against the Fancher Party, by all accounts an innocent band travelling through the territory in violation of martial law imposed by Mormon Leader Brigham Young.

Descendants of those who committed the massacre, only one of whom was ever successfully prosecuted and subsequently shot, also attended, as did historians with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Descendants of massacre victims (seven children from the slaughtered party were taken and "adopted" by Mormon families) were also present.

They heard about efforts to preserve the grave site through a master plan compiled by the descendant groups and LDS Church, which has been acquiring property around the site and plans to buy more.

The LDS Church and descendant groups are meeting to preserve the site for posterity.
In an interesting case of self-analysis the church has expanded its holdings from the mere 2.5 acres where the current memorial is located to 700 acres - including more than 200 acres that would have been subdivided near the meadows.

Sixteen acres recently acquired by the church is believed to be the location where the bones of men killed at the massacre were buried a year later. The church may purchase another site where children and women could be buried, if pending investigations reveal the bodies are there.

The Mormon church has opened up about Mountain Meadows since the archives of the church were opened to scholars. During the 150th anniversary at the site, apostle Henry B. Eyring was the first church leader to acknowledge the massacre was carried out by local church leaders.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Nantucket Ahab Busted For Trafficking In Sperm Whale Teeth


A Nantucket antique dealer has been charged with the illegal importing and trafficking of sperm whale teeth. David Place was indicted Friday on multiple counts of conspiracy and violating federal laws prohibiting the trade of items from illegally harvested wildlife.

Investigators say that Place bought and sold sperm whale teeth from 2001 to 2004, a violation of the Endangered Species Act.

If convicted, Place faces up to five years in prison and fines up to $250,000.

Friday, May 29, 2009

From Russia, With No Love Whatsoever...

Things on the slow side these last two weeks or so as people sat on the sidelines, I guess, and wait to make sure the country's financial news was really as good as people were saying.

Upticking stock market, lower jobless rates, a few good economic indicators we thought would get people feeling good about spending again but nosireee, not these last two weeks.

Sure, we sold a nice Plains Indian pipe bag (thanks, Norm) and some lower end WWII things - all to nice people, but nowhere near the high-volume, high-end sales of yore. One interesting tale involved a call we made to a house in San Francisco, the lady adamant that we appraise her antiques.

She was interesting, let's put it that way. Rather brusque and not a lot of fun to be around. I resolved to "get in, get out" as she was making rather pointed comments about our pricing and services.

Long story short she didn't have much at all until I got to an old desk, partner's type and nice enough - I put it down as English in origin. She was hovering, jabbering on about stuff and distracting me - so much so that I almost passed one of the desk drawers, which was balky and unseated.

"There's something wrong with it," she said. "But that shouldn't hurt the price, right? It's early 18th Century..."

"Twentieth," I responded, and shouldn't have... but what the hell. About 1910. Nothing spectacular. I worked on the drawer a little more and quickly realized something had fallen down behind it. Shifting drawers revealed the problem as a lovely little sterling silver czarist military jetton fell out of the carcass and landed with a lovely warm feel in the palm of my hand.

Nice marks, all Cyrillic lettering and three piece construction... I guessed it's age at about 1890 and probably from one of the higher end military academies. I didn't have as long as I'd like to study it because she snatched it from me.

"What's this?" she said. I told her. I had a sinking feeling when I did but nevertheless, I told her. The badge disappeared into her sweater pocket as she prattled on about thieves and con men and how she'd had such good luck with ebay.

I was heartsick. In my hand and gone, probably to be misidentified and raffled off at the earliest opportunity. I did my job and left her, still grooving on the way that little badge dropped right into my palm.

And that's the way it goes in the antiques biz.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

"Gone With The Posse, Mama..." - Story Of A Gold Country Badge


Fred Huston was a farrier and part-time gold seeker living in Jamestown, Cal. when he was asked to join a posse looking for the prolific highwayman Charles Boles - known at the time as the poetically inclined "Black Bart."

"Bart" had just held up a stage in Oroville and was reportedly just steps ahead of lawmen who'd set their caps to catch him when word spread that a wider net was needed and a posse was being formed.

Fred put down his blacksmith's hammer picked up a rifle and joined up, telling his mother he'd be gone awhile. But the fleet-footed Boles was a skilled woodsman and cross country trekker. He made good time getting out of the area with $2000 or so of Wells Fargo's money and promptly disappeared.

Fred eventually joined up with the legendary Harry Morse, who dedicated a good portion of his life to catching the elusive highwayman who, as it turned out, was living the life of a wealthy mine owner in that most sinful of cities, San Francisco.


The posse traveled near and far looking for Bart, Huston getting a badge made by Reiningers of San Francisco, a short rosewood truncheon, and a monthly purse to participate. All he ever found was a young schoolmarm, Nettie Hinch, when the posse passed through Gilroy.

It took the mountain man a while to get around to it but eventually he asked Nettie to come away with him, she acquiesced and they moved back to Jamestown, leaving Morse to eventually track and capture the fast-moving Boles in San Francisco, after he left an embroidered handkerchief behind at the scene of one of his robberies.

Fred and Nettie were married and settled down to having children, Fred still gathering his "poke sack" of beans and coffee and taking off into the mountains to fish and pan for gold while Nettie waited at home.

His badge, photo and truncheon surfaced recently at a home in Livermore, Cal. Nettie's picture was not far away.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

"Jobless, Illiterate Irishman" Loots English Castles



A man described in the British press as a "jobless, illiterate Irishman" has been arrested in Britain for a series of robberies at stately manor homes and national landmarks.

Andrew Shannon, 44, of Dublin is accused of travelling to England for a "weekend crime spree" with an accomplice, the two men using GPS locators and wireless communications devices to locate target homes and to communicated with each other during their robberies - almost always conducted while the homes were open for public enjoyment.

Apparently Mr. Shannon considered six homes, including Blenheim Palace, a "soft target," walking away with porcelain, paintings, silver and a walking stick from Belvoir Castle.

He was found out when he was approached by a security man who saw two oil paintings stuffed into Shannon's laptop case.

Police found out that Shannon had pilfered items from Castle Howard, Blenheim, Belvoir and other landmark homes, customarily open to the public to display their historic contents.

Shannon was sentenced to three years "in the nick."

A Salty Old Dog Goes Home

I love this antiques game.

Interesting people, interesting objects. Take last night. I get a call from a couple living near us in the San Francisco Bay Area. They're interested in a sterling silver Merchant Marine pin we have from World War II.

We meet on this one 'cause they want to see it and it turns out the pin is for their father, a former merchant mariner who served in the Pacific, was shipwrecked, and passed recently. My buyer is his grandson, himself a just discharged Coast Guard corpsman.


He handled the pin like I'd just dropped a gold nugget in his palm and took it on the spot.

"It's for a shadow box we're doing on his grandfather," his girlfriend explained. "He led a very colorful life."

I'll say. Action in the Pacific, a shipwreck, back home to the East Bay and family who followed in his footsteps and went to sea. It's cool when these things "go home."

To my buyers: enjoyed meeting you very much...

Monday, May 11, 2009

"Cool As Steve McQueen" - His Bikes Sell For Big Bucks


What recession?

A sale of various old motorcycles - everything from a 1950 Vincent White Shadow to the crotch rockets actor Steve McQueen liked to tool around on - went under the hammer over the weekend in our famed Carmel Valley.

Next time you look at the old rusting, leaking hunk of iron you have left sitting in your garage since 1972 consider this - the sale brought in nearly a million in proceeds for those lucky enough to have owned some of the fastest metal around.

The Series C. White Shadow fell under the hammer at $111,150. And someone shelled out $166,000 for two of the perpetually cool actor's bikes as well as his driver's licenese. Hey, I got an old California license right here I'll sell ya...

A bidder paid $84,240 for McQueen's 1963 Triumph Bonneville "desert sled," a bike built by Bud Ekins, a motorcycle racer and friend of the actor best remembered for his iconic barbed wire jump in "The Great Escape."

Another Triumph, not for sale on Saturday, was gussied up to look like a World War II vintage motor and used in the chase and jump sequence... which Ekins made while McQueen did the closeup work.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Minding The Curators - When Museums Go Bad


Our customers are always so surprised when they learn we buy a lot of things from museums around the country. Many labor under the impression that museums are just these great big warehouses where cool old things come in, are cared for, and displayed in a way to benefit the former owner's tax status.

Sometimes. But those warehouses cost money, have limited space, and cannot accomodate the flow of incoming items. So the museum "deaccessions" - a fancy word for sells off duplicate items or things they cannnot build a display around.

And we buy it. We've purchased items from the Smithsonian and small local museums around the country, and loved the items we've gotten. We often receive a phone call from people trying to get it back, thinking they'd donated it to the museum in perpituity.

Nope. Not the way it works.

And sometimes, things go way wrong, with the curator taking the items that come in to the museum and "deaccessioning" them for himself.

This happened recently in the Northern California town of Fortuna, when a former curator of the Fortuna Depot Museum was arrested for skimming off some cool - fishing items - and selling them on E-Fraud, we mean, Ebay.

The accused has been charged with stealing museum items, some of which he later sold on eBay for $826.18.

Investigators said the items consisted of around 40 pieces of antique fishing equipment dating from the 1920s through the 1940s. All were later found at the man's home.

"I guess there's a collector's market on that stuff," an investigator remarked. Well, yeah, copper - there is.

The curator was booked on charges of grand theft and possession of stolen property and later released on his own recognizance.

So, consider this a cautionary tale about museums - they don't always do what they're supposed to do, and sometimes the things we all love so much are reduced to the status of mere commodities. It's a fact of life, if somewhat sordid.

Know who you're donating to and get the details in writing. It's the best advice we can give you.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Auction of Antique Torture Devices To Benefit Amnesty International


We've been around long enough to know that there's a collector out there for just about everything - and not to get too much into the psychology behind a person's collecting habits.

That said, a pretty unusual collection by any one's standards is coming up to auction in New York - with the collector wishing that proceeds from the sale be used to benefit people who could use the help.

The New York house is handling the sale of a broad collection of medieval torture devices - everything from the infamous "rack" to even more heinous devices used over the years to inflict harm.

The auctioneer says the 252 devices may comprise the most complete collection in existence of historical torture devices. All proceeds will go to Amnesty International and other organizations committed to preventing torture at the request of the seller - who requested anonymity.

The collection was last on public display in 1893.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Dodge Guns Go Big


Proving yet again that they can be one of the most sound investment opportunities in a dicey economic landscape, several antique guns fetched six figure sums during today's sale at Cowans.

An anonymous phone bidder paid $440,000 for a never-fired 1886 Winchester rifle made for auto magnate John F. Dodge while a Savage Model 1889 Takedown Rifle, which also features Dodge’s initials in raised gold, went for $230,000.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

"Mr. Jobs - Don't Tear Down This House!"

Our headline should be read with the best Reagan intonation you can muster.

Sigh, well, here we go again. Today's a big day for Apple chieftain Steve Jobs who has been fighting a long drawn out battle to tear down a house he owns in posh Woodside, California.

It's a beaten up, 17,250 square foot Spanish colonial mansion built by a San Francisco copper king and now in deep disrepair as Mr. Jobs, who favors the new and streamlined over the old and leaking, seeks to replace the structure with a fresh one of his own - presumable one you can blow into and play like a flute (you have to have an iPhone to understand that one).

He bought the rancho in 1984 and wants to level it but preservationists say hey, what about the antique organ, lavish fittings, and other stuff only antique people know about and love that are still inside.

Jobs said "come and get 'em" - just take the house with you when you leave. Today the Woodside town council will reconsider Jobs' longstanding request to level the 84-year-old structure, which many say was left to rot in place.

Antiqueswest.com doesn't have room for the organ, but we'll take the sinks and other fittings, Steve - huh? Pretty please?

Monday, April 27, 2009

Face To Face With History In Egypt


I've always been interested in Egyptology, not so much for the study of successive Egytpian Dynasties through the ages, but what archeologists have to go through to unearth the past there.

It seems they've unearthed a significant find recently southwest of Cairo.

Egyptian archaeologists on Sunday unveiled mummies, brightly painted sarcophagi and dozens of ancient tombs carved into a rocky hill in a desert oasis south of Cairo.

More than fifty tombs — some as old as 4,000 years — were discovered recently on a plateau overlooking farming fields in the village Illahun, located in the Fayoum oasis about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southwest of the Egyptian capital.

Archaeologists gave journalists a rare tour of the ancient burial site Sunday, which is next to the nearly four millennia old pyramid of Pharaoh Sesostris II.

Three slim wooden sarcophagi believed to be holding female mummies were laid out in one of the tombs. The innermost coffins were painted to resemble the deceased using blue, yellow, rust and black dyes.

In another tomb, workers slowly removed the lid of one inscribed with hieroglyphic prayers to reveal a colorful mummy case that el-Ayedi said belonged to a woman named Isis Her Ib, the daughter of one of Illahun's mayors nearly 4,000 years ago.

Not much was known about who used the ancient necropolis. El-Ayedi said some of the tombs were just 2,800 years old, while others were from the Middle Kingdom, which dates back 2061-1786 B.C.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Maltese Boilermaker - A Riddle For You Engineers


We all know how old things can sometimes take on a life of their own, taking on a provenance - a history - all their own after they are recovered from someone's garden or, in this case, a Maltese dockyard.

It seems the Maltese government recovered what the Maltese Times is billing as a 130-year-old steam locomotive under "layers of dirt" at the much-bombed and historic dockyards recently, restoring the engine to its former splendor.

But as we have often seen when old things are ressurected, this one's past is open to discussion, with you engineering types wading in about its origin, use, and age.

Check out the Malta Times video article HERE and let me know what you think. Looks like a WWI-era backup boiler to me but I know better than to question you guys when it comes to push rods, lifters, and armatures.

Anyway, a fun little puzzle from Antiqueswest.com

Friday, April 24, 2009

Rip, A Dickins of a Heroic Dog


A medal awarded to possibly the earliest version of today's rescue dogs was sold at auction today for the U.S. equivalent of $36,000 - more than $15,000 over estimate.

The Dickin Medal, Britain's highest honor for animals and known as "the animals' VC, was awarded to a mongrel dog named Rip who was credited with finding more than 100 people trapped in bombed out buildings during World War II.

Rip had been found abandoned in an air raid shelter and was adopted by E. King, an Air Raid Precaution Warden. He went to work with no formal rescue training and proved quite effective at the job.

Maria Dickin, who established the medal program, decorated Rip in 1945. Among the 62 animals awarded the Dickin Medal are dogs, pigeons, horses and a cat.

World War II Dive Bomber Comes Up Off the Bottom of Lake Michigan Today


We've been watching this one for awhile and will bring you whatever we can get of attempts to lift a war-era Douglas SBD Dauntless out of frosty Lake Michigan.

Our understanding is that the beautifully preserved veteran has actually reached the surface of the lake, has been boomed off to prevent oil discharge and is being allowed to drain a bit before she is lifted onto a recovery barge.

Incredible work by preservationists. The airplane will replace an SBD currently on display at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans after restoration. Early indicators are that some wing crumpling and nose damage is apparent but that the fuselage is intact and still bearing its WWII markings.

It's a relic of a time when young pilots practiced takeoffs and landings from a pair of coal-burning paddlewheel ships converted into freshwater aircraft carriers, so seagoing carriers could stay at war. There are dozens of such wrecks in the lake.

This one, when restored, should be worth a cool $2 million.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Matisse, Monet, Turner... Hitler?

A set of paintings and sketches purportedly done by a young Adolf Hitler sold at auction Thursday for 97,672 pounds ($143,358).

Among the 15 pictures is a portrait of solitary figure dressed in brown peering into wine-colored waters. The date is 1910, the signature reads "A. Hitler" and scribbled just over the mysterious figure are the letters: "A.H."

Mullocks, the auction house that conducted the sale, vouched for the authenticity and said they were acquired at the end of WWII by a British soldier serving in Germany.

The "mystery" portrait sold for about 10,000 pounds ($14,600). Buyer John Ratledge, 46, said he planned to hang it at home or in his office.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

"Cannon Ball" Unearthed by Gardener Turns Out To Be Old Fence Post Finial

Police in Fort Smith, Arkansas say a man puttering in his garden was surprised to find a Civil War era cannonball in his garden. Only the "cannonball" turned out to the top of an old fencepost.

Proving that even experts can be fooled when it comes to dirty, crusty old things the four-inch round chunk of metal was "touched off" by sympathetic detonation later today and later x-rayed - when it was determined to be decorative and not combative.

There were a number of Civil War engagements in and around Fort Smith, including the Battle of Massard Prairie.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Dumb and Dumber Destroy Fifteen Antique Vehicles

You hear about this from time to time, a couple of miscreants get together and pool what limited mental resources they have and set out to destroy something nice.

In Mountainboro, AL, two kids ages 11 and 13 admitted to setting a fire at a local storage facility that gutted fifteen antique cars and motorcycles.

The "children" told an investigator they smashed windows on all the vehicles and set one on fire. The flames gutted the building and the vehicles that included cars, a truck and a motorcycle.

Each boy was also charged with criminal mischief and burglary.

No motive was given, but criminal stupidity comes to mind. We harken back several years ago when a couple of real low-life graffiti scribblers jumped the fences of a storage yard in San Francisco and proceeded to deface some antique and historic railcars. Damage: $100,000. Penalty: Slap on the wrist.

These stories hurt in several ways, but mainly because we love these things and don't like to see them destroyed or damaged.

Friday, April 17, 2009

A Day Draped In Black Crepe and Tinged by Mourning


News of President Lincoln's death swept through Washington and touched every resident, every business. The town was draped in black as storefronts turned into impromptu monuments and tributes to the nation's fallen leader.

Someone, possibly a man but no one knows for sure, walked the streets with pen and paper and captured the messages at each address - not to mention the nation's grief.

The age-toned pages, each bearing hand-drawn images of one of the most important days in our national story line, were revealed recently by caretakers at Brown University.

They document the fury of the nation, as well as its sadness.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

"Let Them Eat (Urp)... Cake"


Those who know us know we have had a longstanding love affair with things British for many years - the architecture, the people, the antiques.

And every so often an item ends up on a dealer's table or under the auctioneer's hammer that makes us smile and say: "That's just so... so British."

Take the case of the royal wedding cake. A piece of one, that is... from the 1871 wedding of Queen Victoria's fourth daughter, Princess Louise, to the Marquis of Lorne.

Not the decoration, an actual piece of very old cake. Asking price: 145 pounds, or $215US. Would you shell out your hard-earned pound notes for this slightly crumbly tidbit?

We'll find out - it goes up for sale today in Birmingham.

The slice, which is one-inch thick and protected by parchment, is a tiny portion of the towering 5-foot (1.5 meter) cake served at Princess Louise's wedding. The entire cake originally weighed over 225 pounds (102 kilograms) and took three months to create.

The wedding caused an uproar when Princess Louise angered the Prince of Wales by becoming the first British princess to marry a commoner. She was determined not to be burdened by the ritual of marrying another royal.

The cake slice is still wrapped in its original parchment, and it was kept for generations in a gentlemen's "cabinet of curiosity" where men kept treasures to show off, such as fossils and pieces of Egyptian art.

Monday, April 13, 2009

"Never Been Kissed" Scottish Diva Rocks the UK - Treat Yourself, Folks, Treat Yourself


Click HERE and prepare to be overwhelmed. You'll thank us...

The embed link has been disabled I'm sure because this woman has just been signed to a rather significant recording contract but she walked out onto a stage in the UK last week and brought the house down.

I'm not big on these shows, but this was an incredible moment, made even more significant by the fact that she described herself as "looking like a garage," "never been kissed," and "live alone with me cat, Pebbles."

Gentle readers, if you want to see the triumph of the human spirit incarnate, watch this - and treat yourself to the smarmy, "know everything" look of the teenager who knew before this woman opened her mouth that she was "daff."

Brilliant. Just brilliant. Watch it.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Hearst Castle Paintings Return Home - To Holocaust Survivors


We never cease to be amazed by the circuitous, often tortured routes items that come to us and other collectors often take. This came home to us again this week after three distinctive paintings, mainstays of the art collection on display at William Randolph Hearst's famed "Castle," turned out to have been acquired during a coerced sale of Jewish assets by Nazi "buyers."

The paintings are being returned to the family of two Holocaust survivors and, oh, what they have seen in their lives.

Investigators determined the paintings belong to the heirs of Jacob and Rosa Oppenheimer. They were deeded to the state of California by the Hearst Corporation in 1972 as part of the transfer of the Castle to the state park system.

William Randolph Hearst, who didn't know the ownership history, acquired the paintings from a Berlin gallery in 1935.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

A Very Pretty Kite Indeed...


A rare two-seat version of the beloved Spitfire fighter, the plane that earned a nation's gratitude for its part in the Battle of Britain, may fetch a record price when it goes before the hammer at Bonhams in the next few weeks.

Purists may malign it for its "double bubble" or "two hump" configuration, but this is the real thing, a one-seat World War II-era fighter that became a two-seat trainer in the 21st century.

Bonhams, which is offering the meticulously restored plane at a sale on April 20, estimates it will sell for 1.5 million pounds ($2.2 million). Retrieved from a junkyard in South Africa 30 years ago, the plane is now certified to fly.

Bonhams' Austria unit, Bonhams & Goodman, sold a 1945 Spitfire Mark XVI for NZ$3.2million ($1.8 million) in September, reportedly the record auction price for a Spitfire. That plane had been on display at the U.S. Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio until 1997.

The one now for sale is a Mark IX model delivered on Oct. 23, 1944, one of 23,000 Spitfires built through the war.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Da Vinci Emerges from a Collection in Basilicata


Some beautiful things coming out of the weeds these days as historians expand their reach for interesting bits of history.

One such item was a lovingly rendered portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, discovered the in the art collection of a family in Italy's southern Basilicata region. The artist is unknown and there is damage, but the initial consensus among experts is that the wood supporting the canvas dates to the late 15th or early 16th century - when Leonardo was known to be among us.

The newly discovered portrait, partially damaged by scratches and measuring some 60 by 45 centimeters (24 by 18 inches), shows Leonardo wearing dark robes and a black, feathered hat.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Early View of New York Goes Big


An early daguereotype of a country road, fence line and home - along with a telling handwritten note - sold at auction this week for $62,500 in, where else? - New York.

The proud new owners are Billy and Jennifer Frist of Nashville. “It’s a very unique, historically significant daguerreotype,” Mr. Frist, who has been collecting photos since 1993 and is a nephew of Bill Frist, the Tennessee Republican and former Senate majority leader, told the New York Times.

The picture, believed to date from October 1848 or earlier, shows a white house on a hill with a white picket fence, next to what is believed to be the old Bloomingdale Road, the continuation of Broadway, in what is now the Upper West Side.

Monday, March 30, 2009

The New York Times "Discovers" Sgt. Humiston


Those of us who have steeped ourselves in Civil War lore and pivotal battles of the conflict in particular, are constantly amazed when battlefield legends that have lingered through the decades are "discovered," told in a new way, and mulled as if they are artifacts first seeing the light of day.

One of those tales made it into one of our favorite newspapers today. The New York Times is carrying a serialized (five parts, no less) account of Sgt. Amos Humiston - Gettysburg's so-called "Unknown Soldier."

Sgt. Humiston was felled by a Confederate bullet shortly after his 154th New York Volunteers were overrun by superior forces and hurled back toward Cemetery Hill during the battle of Gettysburg.

That would not be counted as unusual, given the number of good men who died during those three days in Pennsylvania, and his story may have gone untold forever were it not for the small ambrotype of his three children a battlefield forager found clutched in his hand.

Like a good many of the men killed during the battle, Sgt. Humiston wore no corps badge, pinned no note to the back of his battle dress, and was not carrying the letters his wife, Philinda, had sent him and he had read in camp until they tattered.

As did many similar stories created by the fickle travails of war, Sgt. Humiston's story was not revealed for many years after his death, when a concerted - some say opportunistic - search to find his identity and locate the children in the ambrotype, turned up his family.

We won't ruin the ending. Suffice to say it was not a happy one. That this tale has been resurrected for public viewing by so widespread an audience is both confusing and reassuring, as it is our heartfelt belief that this tale - and so many others born out of the War Between the States - should have been given more emphasis in our nation's schools and perhaps not left to individuals, amateur historians, and buffs to ferret out for themselves.

But then, that's just our opinion, an opinion Sgt. Humiston, and several hundred thousand just like him - either knowingly or unintentionally sought to protect through his service to the Union.