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Extraordinary Find: 1655 Shakespeare "King Lear" 3rd Quarto Edition
Clip: Season 28 Episode 24 | 4m 13sVideo has Closed Captions
Extraordinary Find: 1655 Shakespeare "King Lear" 3rd Quarto Edition
At Roadshow's 2022 stop in Shelburne, VT, Devon Eastland appraised a 1655 Shakespeare "King Lear" 3rd quarto edition. Find out what the guest did with the book in Extraordinary Finds 3!
Funding for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is provided by Ancestry and American Cruise Lines. Additional funding is provided by public television viewers.
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Extraordinary Find: 1655 Shakespeare "King Lear" 3rd Quarto Edition
Clip: Season 28 Episode 24 | 4m 13sVideo has Closed Captions
At Roadshow's 2022 stop in Shelburne, VT, Devon Eastland appraised a 1655 Shakespeare "King Lear" 3rd quarto edition. Find out what the guest did with the book in Extraordinary Finds 3!
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipHOST: And now, from a ring to a king.
When rare books expert Devon Eastland discovered a tattered old copy of Shakespeare's King Lear in Vermont in 2022, she could hardly believe her eyes.
And thankfully, what happened after the show was no tragedy.
APPRAISER (voiceover): It was later in the afternoon.
A box of books shows up and, and the guest started taking the books out.
The first one was not very interesting.
And then he had a very, uh, worn, skinny, small, unimportant looking book that was also browned with a bad title page.
But it was a Shakespeare.
GUEST: I brought a book that was part of a collection that my grandfather amassed, and it's just been coming down through the family.
A very eclectic collection.
But this is one that I thought was-was more interesting; it's a-- an edition of William Shakespeare's King Lear.
I first remember the-the books in my grandfather's house.
In his den, he had a shelf about two feet long of old books.
APPRAISER: What you brought is the third quarto edition of King Lear by William Shakespeare, uh, printed by Jane Bell in 1655.
When I was looking it up, I found that the last copy of the 1655 Jane Bell quarto, King Lear, that sold at auction sold in 1946.
GUEST: Really?
APPRAISER: And nothing since.
Nothing since GUEST: Wow.
APPRAISER: and before that, there was a dealer's catalog, maybe from the '20s, nothing else.
So then I looked it up in a bibliography to see how many copies there are in libraries.
And there are only ten copies in the U.S.
GUEST: Really?
APPRAISER: And seven in England, which is also really rare.
GUEST: Wow.
APPRAISER: There are definitely plays that there are 50 copies from the same period, you know, or 30 copies.
And when you look in the auction record, you'll see them, even if it's every ten years or so, one or two come up.
At auction, I would conservatively say $10,000 to $15,000.
GUEST: Really?
APPRAISER: Yes.
GUEST: Wow.
APPRAISER: For this dirty little book.
GUEST: Well, I knew it was unusual, but I had no idea.
GUEST (voiceover): That was certainly more than we had ever expected.
My wife and I went home and we talked about this.
And it was our conclusion that that was such a rare book, that it shouldn't be sitting on our dining room shelf, that it should be part of a collection or part of a library or part of a museum or something like that.
I contacted Devon and told her what we wanted to do and she said that the best way to do that would be to put it up for auction in an auction that specialized in ancient books.
And she was having one coming up.
So we consigned the book to... to, uh, Swann Galleries and we watched the auction.
AUCTIONEER: I can open the bidding on this one at......$10,000, $11,000, $12,000.
$12,000 is bid.
$12,000 with order bidders-- $13,000.
APPRAISER: It was $10,000 to 15,000, we were off and running.
GUEST: It wasn't very exciting at the beginning.
APPRAISER: We moved up into like, you know, $20,000.
We're doing $2,000 increments, so it's $20,000, $22,000.
GUEST: At that point I started rooting for it.
APPRAISER: $24,000, $26,000.
GUEST: Come on, you can make $20,000!
You can make $25,000.
APPRAISER: I mean, at the end, it was just these two phones and it went for $46,000.
And then the way auctions work, because we are middle people, we charge the buyer 25% premium on top.
So the person who bought it ended up paying $57,500.
GUEST: I was just absolutely flabbergasted, just blown away.
Nev-never could have anticipated that at all.
And, uh, just didn't know what to say.
(stammering) And-and still don't.
APPRAISER: I would have been thrilled just to have had that first experience in Vermont.
But it makes it really special to have been able to contribute something to the book and to its journey along the way.
So it's definitely my favorite appraisal and my favorite object that I've, that I've had a chance to, uh, to film on ROADSHOW, for sure.
Extraordinary Find: 1876 John Alexander Stoneware Cooler
Video has Closed Captions
Allan Katz: 1876 John Alexander Stoneware Cooler (6m 49s)
Extraordinary Find: 1892 H.F. Farny Watercolor & Gouache Painting
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Extraordinary Find: 1892 H.F. Farny Watercolor & Gouache Painting (1m 3s)
Extraordinary Find: 1917 Boston Red Sox Baseball Calendar
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Simeon Lipman: 1917 Boston Red Sox Baseball Calendar (3m 8s)
Extraordinary Find: 1941 Willie Sutton Prison Escape Head & Hand
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James Supp: 1941 Willie Sutton Prison-escape Head & Hand (3m 48s)
Extraordinary Find: 1945 Gertrude Abercrombie Surrealist Painting
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Extraordinary Find: 1945 Gertrude Abercrombie Surrealist Painting (3m 59s)
Extraordinary Find: 1964 Aurora Plastics Godzilla Model
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Travis Landry: 1964 Aurora Plastics Godzilla Model (33s)
Extraordinary Find: 1999 Pokémon Base Unlimited & Fossil 1st Ed. Booster Boxes
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Extraordinary Find: 1999 Pokémon Base Unlimited & Fossil 1st Ed. Booster Boxes (4m 3s)
Extraordinary Find: Carroll O'Connor's Archie Bunker Coat
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Extraordinary Find: Carroll O'Connor's Archie Bunker Coat (4m 39s)
Extraordinary Find: Evelyn Rumsey Cary "Woman Suffrage" Poster
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Extraordinary Find: Evelyn Rumsey Cary "Woman Suffrage" Poster (2m 8s)
Extraordinary Find: Helen Hayes's "Verdura for Chanel" Cuff
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Laura Woolley: Helen Hayes's "Verdura for Chanel" Cuff, ca. 1930 (4m 37s)
Extraordinary Find: Jane Peterson "The Answer" Oil Painting
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Extraordinary Find: Jane Peterson "The Answer" Oil Painting (3m 38s)
Extraordinary Find: Louis Rice-designed Skyscraper Coffee & Tea Service
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Extraordinary Find: Louis Rice-designed Skyscraper Coffee & Tea Service, ca. 1928 (4m 47s)
Extraordinary Find: Pete Seeger-autographed Sign
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Extraordinary Find: Pete Seeger-autographed Sign (4m 40s)
Extraordinary Find: Red Diamond Ring
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Kevin Zavian: Red Diamond Ring (3m 54s)
Extraordinary Find: Walter Johnson, Babe Ruth & Honus Wagner-signed Baseballs
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Leila Dunbar: Walter Johnson-signed Baseball/Babe Ruth & Wagner-signed Baseball (5m 35s)
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipFunding for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is provided by Ancestry and American Cruise Lines. Additional funding is provided by public television viewers.