Sell or Auction Your Ernest Hemingway Signed Check for up to Over $2,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE VALUATION. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Ernest Hemingway signed check that is for sale, please email your description and photos [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
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Below is a recent realized price for an Ernest Hemingway signed check. We at Nate D. Sanders Auctions can obtain up to this amount or more for you:
Ernest Hemingway Signed Check. Sold for Over $2,000.
Here are some Ernest Hemingway signed checks that we sold:
Check signed “Ernest M. Hemingway”. Check, dated 1 October 1956, is made out to Hemingway’s friend Roberto Herrera, who also served as manager of his estate in Cuba called Finca Il Vigia. Issued in the amount of 150 pesos, check is drawn on his account with the First National Bank of Boston, Havana branch. Check is endorsed to verso by Herrera and measures 6.25″ x 2.75″. Standard bank cancellations and a few vertical fold creases. Near fine overall. Originally from Herrera himself, who acted as conservator of the Hemingway Museum in Cuba after his friend’s death. Sold for $1,563.
Check signed “Ernest M. Hemingway”. Check, dated 26 May 1956, is made out to Hemingway’s friend Roberto Herrera Sotolongo, who also served as manager of his estate in Cuba called Finca Il Vigia. Issued in the amount of 100 pesos, check is drawn on his account with the First National Bank of Boston, Havana branch. Check is endorsed to verso by Herrera and measures 6.25″ x 2.75″. Standard bank cancellations and a few vertical fold creases. Near fine overall. Originally from Herrera himself, who acted as conservator of the Hemingway Museum in Cuba after his friend’s death.
Sold for $1,563.
Ernest Hemingway Check Signed to the Hotel Ambos Mundos in 1935
Ernest Hemingway check signed to the Hotel Ambos Mundos, his residence in Havana for much of the 1930s, when writing his most celebrated novels. Dated 31 July 1935, check is written entirely in Hemingway’s hand and signed ”Ernest M. Hemingway” in black fountain pen. Check measures 7” x 5”. Minor smudging, and cancellation stamps and small holes, partially affecting signature. Small chip to lower left corner. Overall in very good condition with bold handwriting by Hemingway. Sold or $1,375.
Ernest Hemingway Check From 1952 — To Longtime Friend & Manager of His Property in Cuba
Ernest Hemingway signed check, filled out entirely in his hand and dated 15 October 1952, just weeks after publishing his Pulitzer-prize winning novel, ”The Old Man and the Sea”. Hemingway addresses a check to Roberto Herrera, friend and manager of his ”Finca Il Vigia” property in Cuba, which is now a museum. Signed ”Ernest M. Hemingway”, check for $30 is drawn on the First National Bank of Boston, Havana Branch. Measures 6.25” x 2.75”. Bank cancellation stamps slightly affecting signature, else near fine.
Sold for $1,250.
Ernest Hemingway Check From 1952, Filled Out in His Hand — To Longtime Friend & Manager of His Property in Cuba
Ernest Hemingway signed check, filled out entirely in his hand and dated 16 December 1952. Check is addressed to “Portador”, which means “pay the bearer” in Spanish. Check is endorsed to verso by Roberto Herrera, friend and manager of his “Finca Il Vigia” property in Cuba, which is now a museum. Signed “Ernest M. Hemingway”, check for $18.50 is drawn on the First National Bank of Boston, Havana Branch. Measures 6.25″ x 2.75″. Bank cancellation stamps slightly touching signature. Near fine. Sold for $1,177.
Ernest Hemingway Signed Check From 1950 — Filled Out Entirely in His Hand
Ernest Hemingway signed check, filled out entirely in his hand and dated 14 December 1950. Check is addressed to “Portador”, meaning “pay the bearer” in Spanish. Endorsed to verso by Roberto Herrera, Hemingway’s friend and manager of his “Finca Il Vigia” property in Cuba, which is now a museum. Signed “Ernest M. Hemingway”, check for $10.00 is drawn on the First National Bank of Boston, Havana Branch. Measures 6.5″ x 2.75″. Very light creasing and standard bank cancellations, one of which affects “Ernest”. Very good. Sold for $983.
Ernest Hemingway Check Signed From 1949
Ernest Hemingway check signed, dated 12 November 1949 from the Cuban branch of the First National Bank of Boston. Hemingway signs his full name, ”Ernest M Hemingway” and writes the check in Spanish to ”Portador” (Pay to Bearer) for thirty dollars. Interestingly, he switches pens, writing the payee, amount and date in black ink and then changes to blue for ”Hemingway” underlining his last name with it. Check is endorsed on verso by Roberto Herrera, Hemingway’s friend and manager of his ”Finca Il Vigia” property in Cuba, which is now a museum. Measures 6.5” x 2.75”. Very good condition with cancellation stamps affecting ”Ernest”. Sold for $688.
We also sold these Ernest Hemingway signed items:
Exceptional Ernest Hemingway autograph letter and signed envelope, one day after catching the 500 lb. marlin in Bimini that inspired ”The Old Man and the Sea”, apocryphal until this letter which documents for the first time in Hemingway’s own words not only the size of the marlin, but also its attack by sharks, similar to the plot of Hemingway’s novel. Letter is accompanied by a photo of Hemingway and his friend, Henry Strater, with the half-eaten marlin. Dated 8 May (identified as 1935 by the “Hemingway Letters Project”), Hemingway writes to Erl Roman, the fishing editor of the ”Miami Herald”, describing the catch in detail, the attack by the sharks, and also mentioning that he is sending some photos to Roman. Letter in pencil reads in part,
”Will make this very short on acct. Bill Fagen leaving May 8 / Dear Erl: Yesterday May 7 Henry H. STRATER, widely known painter of OGUNQUIT Maine, Pres. Maine Tuna Club, fishing with me on Pilar landed Blue Marlin which weighed 500 lbs on tested scales after all of meat below anal fin had been torn away by sharks when fish was brought to gaff– Had him ready to take in when sharks hit him– Fish 12 feet 8 1/2 inches– Tail 48 inch spread–girth 62 in. (will send all other exact measurements when have chance to use Steel tape on him). Fish hooked off Bimini, hooked in corner of mouth, never layted, jumped 18 times clear, brought to boat in an hour such a heavy fish jumped hell out of himself. We worked him fast our system. Had him at boat when shark hit him. Strater has football knee, went out of joint, had hell with it, we wouldnt handline fish, he got him up himself, in one hour 40 minutes, we got him over the roller after Some lifting boy, all blood drained, meat gone below anal fin to tail, but fish completely intact, Fred Parke is mounting it–“
Two page autograph letter is accompanied by an envelope signed in pencil, addressed in Hemingway’s hand to ”Erl Roman Esq. / Miami Herald / Miami / Fla.” and signed by Hemingway on the verso, ”E. Hemingway / Yacht Pilar / Bimini / B.W.I.”
Importantly, Hemingway’s account of the marlin catch differs from other anecdotal stories of it, one of which describes Hemingway using a ”machine gun” on the shark, which purportedly attracted more sharks to the feeding frenzy. It’s likely Hemingway left out this detail, as Strater would blame its use on attracting more sharks to the marlin, depriving Strater of a world record marlin catch. “Old Man and the Sea” has been noted by Hemingway scholars as most likely inspired by this particular 7 May 1935 trip, including Michael Culver in his biography “Sparring in the Dark: Hemingway, Strater and The Old Man and the Sea”.
Letter measures 8.5” x 11”, envelope measures approximately 6.25” x 3.625” and photo, which is a modern reproduction, measures 7.75” x 9.75”. Letter is uniformly toned with some chipping along edges, and small piece of tape at very top. Envelope has some foxing and torn edge from opening. Both items are in very good condition. A remarkable letter in Hemingway’s own words of a legendary fishing adventure that inspired one of his most popular, Pulitzer-Prize winning novels. Sold for $28,000.
Ernest Hemingway Signed First Limited Edition of ”A Farewell to Arms” — Scarce in Original Slipcase
Ernest Hemingway signed limited first edition of his post-WWI classic, ”A Farewell to Arms”, housed in its original limited edition slipcase, with numbers matching. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1929. Published on 27 September 1929 in a limited edition of 510 numbered copies, this being #214, signed boldly ”Ernest Hemingway” in black fountain pen. In matching slipcase with Charles Scribner’s Sons plate, again listing the limited edition as #214. Measures 6.5” x 9.5”. Some chipping to seams of slipcase, overall in very good condition. Chipping to spine label, otherwise book is near fine. Sold for $10,313.
Ernest Hemingway Signed “Men Without Women” — Dedicated in His Hand to the Son of Renowned Actress Helen Hayes
Ernest Hemingway signed “Men Without Women”, Charles Scribner’s Sons: New York: 1955. Hemingway’s autograph dedication to the front free endpaper is to the son of actress Helen Hayes and reads in full: “To Jim MacArthur / With best wishes from his friend / Ernest Hemingway / Finca Vigia / San Francisco de Paula / Cuba”. Hemingway’s short story collection is bound in oatmeal cloth boards with gilt lettering and black print to spine. Measures 5.25″ x 7.5″. Cocking to spine, mild sunning to backstrip and wear to spine ends, else near fine. From the estate of Helen Hayes. Sold for $8,160.
Ernest Hemingway signed presentation copy of ”The Old Man and the Sea”, the novel perhaps most responsible for Hemingway’s Nobel Prize in Literature awarded in 1954, the same year he signed this copy. Hemingway writes in bold blue ink, ”For Ian / with much affection / Ernest Hemingway. / Laitokotok 1954”. The recipient is Ian Richard Whichello, a policeman in Kenya at the time of the inscription, and the place, Laitokotok, is a town in Kenya near Amboselli National Park – the site of Mount Kilimanjaro, which Hemingway and his wife visited in January 1954. Shortly after this visit the Hemingways would survive two well-known plane crashes, after which Whichello might have attended to them, given the personal nature of the inscription here. Copy published in London by the Reprint Society, 1953, with decorative illustrations throughout including the large marlin on the endpapers. Bound in teal cloth boards with silver lettering and embellishments to boards. Measures 6.25” x 8.75”. Whichello’s name on front free endpaper, a bit of foxing to endpapers and minimal expert restoration to spine. A stunning copy in very good plus condition with a bold and interesting inscription by Hemingway. Sold for $7,500.
Ernest Hemingway autograph letter signed, announcing the birth of his son, Gregory Hemingway, to his friend Charles MacGregor. MacGregor was a founding member of the literary group Algonquin Round Table (or ”The Vicious Circle” as they called themselves), to which Hemingway belonged, along with Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley and Donald Ogden Stewart, all of whom Hemingway mentions here. Written from Kansas City, Missouri, letter is undated, but includes the original envelope postmarked 16 November 1931, four days after Gregory was born. Two page letter on single sheet measures 8.5” x 11”. Folds and very small tears at a few folds. Overall in very good condition. Accompanied by envelope handwritten by Hemingway, measuring 6.25” x 4”. Sold for $7,500.
Spectacular image of a male lion, in profile, with one paw placed upon a zebra it has just killed. Vintage photograph is made all the more spectacular as signed by Ernest Hemingway, famously known for his African safaris. Sepia matte-finish photo measures 11” x 9”, signed and inscribed in fountain pen, ”To Lynn Bogue Hunt from his friend / Ernest Hemingway.” Taken while on safari in Tanganyika, Hemingway here inscribes the awe-inspiring photograph to Hunt, one of the most famous sporting artists of the 20th century. Matted and framed to an overall size of 17.5” x 15.5”. Scattered light creasing, light rippling to top edge, and mild silvering to darker areas of image, otherwise fine condition. A fantastic, one-of-a-kind piece. Sold for $6,544.
Ernest Hemingway Signed First Edition of His Masterpiece, ”For Whom the Bell Tolls”
Ernest Hemingway signed first edition of ”For Whom the Bell Tolls.” New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons: 1940. First edition, first printing indicated by Scribner’s ”A” on copyright page. Hemingway signs and inscribes on the front free endpaper, ”To Dr. Nathan Ratnoff / with sincere good wishes / Ernest Hemingway”. Considered one of the finest novels of the modern movement, Hemingway’s work mulls the impact of our lives and deaths upon each other. The ultimate answer seems to lie in the title, taken from John Donne’s ”Meditation”: ”No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend’s or of thine own were: any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.” Book, lacking the dustjacket, is in very good condition with some foxing. Boards are uniformly toned with some soiling. Signature page is very bold with clear handwriting. Sold for $5,407.
Ernest Hemingway Signed First Edition, First Printing of “The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories” — A Very Uncommon Title Signed by Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway signed first edition, first printing of his anthology work, “The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories”, an uncommon title signed by the Pulitzer Prize winning author, which includes Hemingway’s only full-length play “The Fifth Column” along with several stories set during the Spanish Civil War, and his first writing “Up in Michigan”. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1938 with Scribner seal on copyright page and “A”, as required. Hemingway signs the front free endpaper in fountain pen, “To Jean & Harrison / best wishes always / Ernest Hemingway”. Bound in red-orange boards, book measures 6″ x 8.5″. Sunning to backstrip and light soiling to boards. Some toning and mild discoloration to interior, and front joint faintly starting. Overall in very good condition, housed in facsimile dust jacket. Sold for $5,250.
Ernest Hemingway Signed Copy of His Classic Novel “For Whom The Bell Tolls”
Ernest Hemingway signed copy of his classic novel “For Whom the Bell Tolls”. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1955 later edition. Hemingway inscribes the front free endpaper, “To Robert Stein / with best wishes from his friend / Ernest Hemingway / Ile de France 1957.” Book measures 5.75″ x 8.5″ without dust jacket. Some soiling to boards and sunning to spine. Binding slightly loose and toning to endpapers, overall in very good condition. Sold for $3,675.
FREE VALUATION. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Ernest Hemingway signed check that is for sale, please email your description and photos [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
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