Finding Maritime Items at Art Auctions
I find some really nice maritime items for my collection at
art auctions. I went to an art auction in Charleston last month
and found a pair of candle powered navigation lights that were
used on ships in the 19th century. These types of candles were
also used in lighthouse stairwells.
My collection also includes a maritime item that was made in
1891. It is a chronometer and it still keeps great time. It is
very special because the broad arrow on it indicates that it
was purchased by the British Navy and they are known to have
only the best time pieces. I found this piece of my collection
at an art auction in New Hampshire.
I have another chronometer in my collection that I found at
an art auction in Dallas. It was sold to me in a wooden box
from someone that had owned it for fifty years. They had kept
this maritime relic in a closet. I plan to keep it on
display.
I was at an art auction in Miami a couple of years ago and
found a fantastic maritime item for my personal collection. The
compass that I won was over 100 years old and was made in
Persia. The compass face has all twelve signs of the zodiac
engraved on it. I thought that this was a great find.
My kids thought I was crazy when I drove to an art auction
is Hartford and drove back with three hundred pounds of
maritime Navy anchors. I thought they'd look great in the yard.
I like to have art in my yard, in the beds I made around my
trees. No one wanted to help me unload them.
I found myself in a bidding war at an art auction in
Mississippi over the original builder's plate from the SS
Contessa. It is truly a unique and wonderful maritime item. I
have polished it and it gleams in the display case I bought for
it.
Maritime items don't seem to be in as much demand anymore. A
few years ago, my collection got easier to add to for some
reason. Art auctions everywhere I went started having really
great things on the auction block.
The brass plaques from old ships have always been one of my
favorite things to find up for sale at art auctions. One of my
favorite maritime plaques came from a ship that was used in
WWII. The ship that the plaque was on was called the Marechal
Joffre and it was taken from the French in 1942. The Maritime
Commission renamed the ship USS Rochambeau.
I had a friend of mine that was going to attend an art
auction in Anchorage a couple of years ago bid on a bell for
me. I had no idea how much the freight charge was going to end
up being, but I wanted this maritime item in my collection. It
was magnificent.
There is going to be a really nice maritime item at an art
auction I intend to attend this weekend. Lighthouse items are
of interest to me more and more lately. I have found that there
is going to be an antique brass oil lamp up for auction and I
plan to win it. The price will probably get up to fifteen
hundred dollars, but I don't care. I need this maritime item in
my collection.
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