Sell Your Titanic Stationery April 10 1912 Autograph Letter Signed for up to Over $20,000 at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE ESTIMATE. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed item that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).
Sell Your Titanic Atationery April 10 1912 Autograph Letter Signed
Below is a recent realized price for a Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed item. We at Nate D. Sanders Auctions can obtain up to this amount or more for you:
Titanic Stationery April 10 1912 Autograph Letter Signed. Sold for over $20,000.
Here are some items that our auction house, Nate D. Sanders (http://www.NateDSanders.com), has sold:
Very Scarce RMS Carpathia Captain Arthur Rostron Handwritten Letter — While on That Ship Just One Month Before He Rescued the Titanic!
Scarce autograph letter signed by Captain Arthur Rostron of the RMS Carpathia, the famed ship that rescued nearly half of the Titanic survivors. This letter is especially unique as it’s dated one month before the wreck of the Titanic. Datelined “R.M.S. Carpathia / N.Y. 3-6-12 / 10am”, letter reads in full, “Dear Sir: Just a line to thank you for your letter – I am really very busy two minutes even to myself. Yours truly, A.H. Rostron.” Letter is written upon a 5.5″ x 3.5″ card. Writing is still bold, overall in near fine condition. Sold for $2,013.
Consign your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed at Nate D. Sanders Auctions. Send a description and images of your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed to us at [email protected].
Walter Lord’s ”The Night Lives On” signed by Lord and six Titanic survivors. Published by William Morrow & Co., Inc.: New York: 1986. Book is signed on the title page by survivors ”Eva Hart”, ”B.V. Dean”, ”Edith Haisman nee Brown”, ”Maggie A. Robb”, ”Louise Pope”, ”Michel Navratal” and by author ”Walter Lord”. Dean and Brown add the date as 11 April 1987. Runs 272pp. and measures 5.75” x 8.5”. Bound in blue paper boards with navy blue cloth spine and silver gilt lettering to spine. Very slight cocking to spine and shelf wear. Near fine overall. With original unclipped dustjacket that shows toning, else near fine. Sold for $1,375.
Titanic Survivor Marshall Drew — “…several ships wirelessed the Titanic of the danger of the icebergs…Capt. Smith treated this rather casually…He didn’t reduce speed…Nor did he change course…”
Three pages of an undated autograph letter signed by Titanic survivor Marshall Drew, an 8-year-old when traveling in second class on the Titanic with his aunt. He was awakened by the jolt of the ship hitting the iceberg, and recounts much of what happened that tragic night in this letter: “In Southampton before the Titanic sailed, coal had to be taken from other ships to load the Titanic’s bunkers. In such haste one bunker was loaded so fast that combustion caused it to burn. It was burning all the way…The crew was taken from other ships so hurriedly that they were unfamiliar with the Titanic’s length, eleven decks, etc…I understand that men in the crows nest asked for binoculars. There were none. Only one officer had a pair and being on the bridge it was unlikely he was going to surrender them. Several ships wirelessed the Titanic of the danger of the icebergs…The wireless operator on the California had tried to talk to the Titanic operator and was told to ‘buzz off’ or words to that effect He was busy. Unlike the paintings of the disaster the sea was absolutely calm with only an ocean ‘swell’…The sky and sea were black. No ripple or small wavelet betrayed the base of our iceberg. Before they could be seen at all the Titanic was headed into one. The officer on the bridge told by the lookout ‘panicked’ and tried to have the rudder changed to swerve the ship aside. Too late…The Titanic had 16 lifeboats…because British maritime law…required that many…Lifeboat no. 11 (which my aunt and I were in) was the only lifeboat filled to capacity…” At the end of the letter, Drew mentions Senator Smith from Michigan who held Senate hearings immediately after the disaster. Letter is closed, “Very best to Cindy and the boys. Marshall”. Two 8.5″ x 11″ sheets are in near fine condition. Sold for $1,200.
Consign your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed at Nate D. Sanders Auctions. Send a description and images of your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed to us at [email protected].
Menu from Ill-Fated R.M.S. Lusitania — Also With 3 Tix
Menu from R.M.S. Lusitania, dated 9 October 1913, two years before German U-boats sank the British ship off the coast of Ireland. The sinking of the Cunard liner helped turn public opinion against Germany and influenced America’s entry into World War I. Menu for the second cabin meal measures 5″ x 7.75″ and is accompanied by a D Deck seating ticket and two deck chair tickets. Items are matted to an overall size of 9″ x 18.25″. Minor creasing and damp-staining to menu, else very good. Sold for $934.
FREE ESTIMATE. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Titanic stationery April 10 1912 autograph letter signed item that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected] of Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com).