Vancouver Sun

Abe’s artifacts on the block?

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The hunt has begun for auctioneer­s to sell off parts of a valuable collection of Abraham Lincoln artifacts, including an iconic stovepipe hat and gloves bloodied the night he was assassinat­ed, to settle a US$9.7 million debt. But the Abraham Lincoln Presidenti­al Library and Museum Foundation cautioned a sale isn’t imminent.

WHY THE POSSIBLE SALE?

The foundation voted in a private meeting to begin seeking an auction house to dispose of parts of the Taper collection of 1,400 items related to Lincoln in a move that foundation CEO Carla Knorowski said is necessary to meet the debt’s due date, not as a tactic to scare up state funding. The US$25 million collection was purchased in 2007 by borrowing US$23 million — Taper donated $2 million worth of items. There’s a $9.7 million balance due in October 2019 on a loan that’s been refinanced several times and strained the patience of private contributo­rs. While no one wants to see Illinois lose any of the items, Knorowski said, the process for preparing to sell has to begin now. It took 10 months to arrange and auction off Taper-collection items which belonged to movie star Marilyn Monroe.

WHAT COULD BE LET GO?

In addition to the top hat purportedl­y belonging to the 16th president and the blood-stained kid gloves, the Land of Lincoln’s extraordin­ary collection also includes the quill pen left on Lincoln’s desk when he died; his presidenti­al seal, replete with wax left on it from its last use; a book with his earliest known writings; notes between Lincoln and his wife, Mary; and Lincoln White House china. “Lincoln is an economic engine. He always has been,” Knorowski told The Associated Press. “He’s what people look for, he’s who people look to. To this day, they ask, ‘What would Lincoln do?’ These items, whether it’s the hat or the gloves or a lock of his hair, they tell the story of the leader among leaders.”

A WAKE-UP CALL?

It doesn’t hurt that the brash action serves as a wake-up call to anyone, including state officials, who might think it couldn’t happen. It could bolster foundation hopes to tap US$5 million in tourism promotion funds — paid for by hotel occupancy taxes — that could serve as a “challenge” grant to inspire private contributo­rs to put up the rest.

DONOR FATIGUE?

“After 11 years of fundraisin­g for a specific campaign, there comes a point at which you have donor fatigue,” Knorowski said. “They need a new song, they need a new angle . ... A tourism grant would break the logjam.” Interim steps on debt reduction have shown good faith, if few dollars. The nine items associated with the late movie star Marilyn Monroe, including a dress that sold for $50,000, were auctioned in Las Vegas. A foundation staff member started a crowdsourc­ing GoFundMe campaign, which has raised just over $10,000 from 213 people.

 ?? SETH PERLMAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? The bloodstain­ed kid gloves Abraham Lincoln carried on the night of his death in 1865 could be auctioned off.
SETH PERLMAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES The bloodstain­ed kid gloves Abraham Lincoln carried on the night of his death in 1865 could be auctioned off.
 ??  ?? Abraham Lincoln’s stovepipe hat is part of the Lincoln Presidenti­al Library and Museum in Springfiel­d, Ill.
Abraham Lincoln’s stovepipe hat is part of the Lincoln Presidenti­al Library and Museum in Springfiel­d, Ill.

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