Imperial Valley Press

Rare first printing of US Constituti­on sells for record $43M

- BY KAREN MATTHEWS

NEW YORK – A rare first printing of the U.S. Constituti­on sold at Sotheby’s in New York for $43.2 million, a record price for a document or book sold at auction.

The anonymous winning bidder at Thursday night’s sale outbid a group of 17,000 cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s from around the world who crowdfunde­d to buy it over the last week.

The document offered for sale was one of 13 known copies of the first printing of the Constituti­on and one of only two in private hands.

This printing of the Constituti­on was last sold in 1988, when real estate developer and collector S. Howard Goldman bought it at auction for $165,000.

Proceeds from Thursday’s sale will benefit a foundation establishe­d by Goldman’s widow, Dorothy Tapper Goldman, to further the understand­ing of constituti­onal principles.

“Tonight’s sale of this exceptiona­lly rare and important printing of the Constituti­on was a monumental and historic occasion,” Selby Kiffer, Sotheby’s senior internatio­nal specialist for books and manuscript­s, said in a statement.

Kiffer said the auction result reflects how relevant the Constituti­on remains, “not only in America but for global democracy.”

The underbidde­r was Constituti­onDAO, which announced its plan to raise millions of dollars to buy the Constituti­on on Twitter on Nov. 12. DAO stands for decentrali­zed autonomous organizati­on, a type of community-run business that operates on the blockchain.

Constituti­onDAO tweeted Thursday night, “We showed the world what crypto and web3, onboarding thousands of people in the process, including museum curators and art directors who are now excited to keep learning.”

The group added, “We were the first DAO Sothebys has ever worked with, but we’re sure we won’t be the last one.” The previous auction record for a book or manuscript was set in 1994 when Bill Gates purchased the Codex Leicester by Leonardo da Vinci at Christie’s for $30.8 million.

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