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Another Week Another Auction Find
Yep this is getting too easy...and expensive...Anyway this week it is a High Condition WW2 Luger (S42 with 1937 Chamber Date), 1942 Dated Holster, Nazi Marked Combat Knife wt Scabard and to top it off the US GI Bring Back Certificate dated November 1945 with these items listed by serial number. I think a German WW2 Military Collector would ***** his pants over this one.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1174164792.jpg |
Very, very nice, there tabs. Congrats. I have a similar holster/sidearm combination, but with the far more pedestrian P-38. My father-in-law retrieved it from a German aquaintance in Italy who had no further use for it.
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how the hell do you eat your cereal with that?
Spoons! We need more spoons! |
What the hell; here is a photo. Maybe you can tell me what the dagger is - got it from my uncle Deiter when I was about ten years old. Looks like a real ivory grip, has a pewter sheath, swastika on the hilt. The blade is engraved with a small oval with "P.D. Luneschioss Solingen" on the outer ring, and a dagger with a traditional Prussian parade helmet inside the inner ring. Ever see one before? I used to chase my brother around the yard with this thing until mom made me stop.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1174168511.jpg |
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And Nostatus....give me some time and I am sure I'll find some real spoons to eat with... |
Its a Cermonial Dagger worn on Parade occasions. Both knives are common, nothing really special about them. The only thing that makes my rig have a bit of extra premium is the GI Cerificate stating Knife and Gun together. Thats provence...
The WW2 bring back stuff is what everyone wants. Too much has been imported. Everything imported after 1968 has to be stamped by the importer. Stuff was brought into the US until 1968, either by Dealers, Servicemen, Collectors or Tourists. So stuff that is documented GI WW2 bring back is the choich stuff, as there can be no question as to when and where it was aqqiured. |
Oh well; I guess I can keep chasing my brother with it.
The P-38 was lifted from a dead German GI a couple of weeks (maybe months) after D-Day. My father-in-law did not participate in the actual invasion; he was still in North Africa. Spent most of his tour chasing Rommel. |
I like the dagger a lot!
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Just so U know that I am more than a spoon nut, and truly am a man of wealth and taste here are acoupla items I picked up this morining as well. For the low price of $1404 out the door for both the Oriental Rug and Mahogany Partners Desk with Leather Chair . All I have left now is the shipping on the items.
The Desk looks to be American Empire with the rounded front, but we shall see when I examine the Drawers and was $1170.00. The Rug is 4 X 6, looks to be good quality Persian and was $234.00. Thats less than the price one would pay for new cr@p. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1174170991.jpg |
Jeffs Dagger is worth around $400.00, one sold with a cracked handle for $234.00 today. The White Handle is made of Bakelite I think, its a fake Ivory.
The way to test if its Real Ivory is to stick a hot pin into the material in a hidden place, if it smells like burning hair, its Ivory. |
Re: Another Week Another Auction Find
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Your P-38 with Holster I think is worth right around $1500. Depending on the year and mfg of the P-38 it could be more or less. P-38s have risen in value significantly recently...to $800 for a very clean run of the mill gun..rarer variations can be 2K or even more. Ones marked HP..or Heeres Pistol...are commercial mfg and are among the most desirable.
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Believe me I am not in the habit of buying stuff that supposedly was owned by someone or was somewhere at a certain time in history. I did buy the Otto Voit Rifle, but that came from the family, through someone who had known the lady for more than 20 years. Currently pictures of that rifle are in Otto Voits File at the LBH National Monument, and I will get that gun tested to see if it was at the Battle of the LBH. I don't expect it to test positive, but who knows its worth the shot. I mostly buy bread and butter type of stuff like U see today. |
U wana know why that desk pictured is a GOOD piece of furniture, and how U can tell from just a photograph? Very simple really, take a look at the Ball and Claw Feet on the Desk. See how they have tension and almost look life like. Thats one of the signs of a REALLY GOOD PIECE of furniture, along with the highly figured Mahogany. Mahogany is called the King of Woods, being an expensive wood it was used on the very best furniture. I am hoping 1810 to 1840....or American Empire.
Never the less it doesn't really matter as I have been looking on and off for years for the right Desk or Library Table, and this seems to fit the bill perfectly with regards to desirabilty and cost. |
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http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.asp?Item=67679283 |
I don't check Gun Broker nor Guns America....there is good stuff to be gotten cheap...but U have to get up earlier than the Early Bird that gets the Worm. I know a guy in Miss that looks at 4 AM his time everyday for a good value.
The Bulgarian AKs are the snazz...thats why I bought an Aresnal, as the Bulgarians make em here in LV. If I were to buy a Full Auto I would buy a Thompson Machine Gun or maybe a Browning Model 1918...They are American History Baby. |
You should both be banned for owning anti-semitic artifacts.
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And what about those P cars...Dr Porsche was one of Hitlers buds.
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I have a nice map of the LBH massacre that is to being framed. My dad was a big collector of maps of the Americas. He recently sold his entire collection (I am disappointed, I enjoyed all of them), but has a huge collection of first edition books - like Lewis and Clark diaries.
I like following your threads about firearms, Tabs. I hope to someday own an early Winchester repeater and an early Colt revolver. Dave |
For those of U who are interested in the Battle of the Little Big Horn. A man by the name of Glenwood Swanson has written a book called the Life and Times of George Armstrong Custer. There is only going to be the ONE PRINTING and he is nearly sold out of the book. THe book is EXCELLENT in that it shows Glenwoods 25 year collection of 7th Cav memorabilia and well as the museum collections of the same. U trace the course of history through the text and captions to the pictures. If you want a book that is going to APPRECIATE once it is sold out, this is the one. I can say enough for the book, I have told several friends about the book and once they got it have been happy.
BTW: Glenwood is the man who sold 3 Rifles that were proven forensically to have been at the battle...Those 3 guns sold for over $1M. So we are not dealing with a mamby pamby BS subject here. |
Well today I bid on a M1 Garand National Match Type 2..it sold at $1800 + 15% commish and various other taxes and/or shipping fees. This was the 2nd one this month that went for exactly the same money in 2 different parts of the USA. To have gone higher would have brought my cost up to $2200 on a $2500 gun. Hmmmm
Anyway one of the leading Springfield Trapdoor guys lives here in LV. I have talked to him about buying any Trapdoors that I might come across cheap. Well today I picked up a nice 1873 Rifle for $650 out the door...lets see if I can sell it to him for $850.00. |
Very nice Tabs!
Course now with your house getting more and more full, you need to bring the overflow down to Phoenix (on the way to Tucson to see Mother) and we can store it for you safely! :) If you ever get a lead on any more rugs like that, pls let me know. Joe |
Joe the house is allready full, Mother in Tucson pulls her hair out every time I bring something home.
One look at the picture of the Oriental rug I bought and U can tell it is handmade. It looks to be in good shape, it does show some sun fading on one side. For $234 out the door...thats beyond cheap unless its falling apart. Take a good look at that desk and how nice the Ball and Claw feet are, along with the figure in the Mahogany...pssf...$1150 out the door. Come on... Next on the plate is a Webley mdl 1896 Target Revolver, an 1870 Trapdoor and a P-38 with Holster and GI Bring Back Certificate among a host of other things. Now if U boyz are look for anythin and your serious..let me know. From Double Shotguns to M1 Garands, to Dueling Pistols I can find em. Modern stuff is a bit more hassle as I have to get an FFL Dealer involved, and it adds a coupla dollars to the cost. |
Well the Desk finally arrived. It is an Antique Desk, that was made before 1840. I really don't know if it is English or American..lets say American, as the Drawer Pulls have American Eagles on them. The top is made out of a SINGLE SOLID piece of Mahogany. The Ball and Claw Feet are hand carved. It was an expensive Desk when made as most of it is solid Mahogany.
The BAD news is that the Desk was restored sometime before 1974 as there is a Calender from 1974 in the Desk. It also wasn't a first class restoration either. What is interesting is that the top of the desk split and the restorer matched and fit a piece of Mahogany in the crack to repair it. But it looks nice and will serve my purpose of being a Library Table. I paid $1150 plus $700 shipping...OUCH...if I had known it would be so expensive to ship I probably would have passed on the Desk. However it probably is worth the money. I would guess that the closer to 1800 that the desk was made would bring the value of it up. I have to admit that I am NO EXPERT when it comes to furniture, nor rugs really. I just have an eye for something of quality. |
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then again ,you'de have to be a crack shot to take down a flake at top speed with anything other then buckshot. |
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