Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Jerry Brown asks who’s selling dad’s JFK docs

Memorabili­a relating to killing on the block

- By Cuneyt Dil

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Former California Gov. Jerry Brown wants to know who is trying to sell his father’s memorabili­a related to the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy.

Private letters and other items that had belonged to Edmund G. “Pat” Brown when he was governor are being offered by the auction house Sotheby’s, which estimates the value at $20,000 to $30,000. Sotheby’s says the seller wants to remain anonymous.

The elder Brown, who died in 1996, was California’s top elected official from 1959 to 1967, and eight years later his son started the first of his record four terms as governor. Jerry Brown was not consulted or informed of the sale and believes the items should instead reside at the University of California, Berkeley.

“I’d sure like to know why the seller is claiming anonymity and why these documents aren’t at the UC Berkeley archives with the rest of my father’s papers,” Brown said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Sotheby’s touts Brown’s materials for sale as unique because “it comes from a single source” and that it “chronicles a country in mourning.” The auction opens Monday.

Kalika Sands, who works in Sotheby’s Book & Manuscript­s Department, didn’t disclose how the anonymous seller acquired the collection.

Among the items are a letter from Kennedy to Brown written days before the assassinat­ion. In it Kennedy thanks Brown for supporting his tax-reform program.

There’s also a copy of the first AP news bulletin sent after Kennedy was shot. It read: “President Kennedy was shot today just as his motorcade left downtown Dallas. Mrs. Kennedy jumped up and grabbed Mr. Kennedy. She cried, ‘Oh, no!’ The motorcade sped on.”

Other items being sold include a letter from Kennedy’s widow, Jacqueline, sent two years after the assassinat­ion. She expressed her “deepest appreciati­on” to Brown for contributi­ng oral interviews to the John F. Kennedy Library.

While political allies as fellow Democrats, Brown and Kennedy were not particular­ly close personally, according to Ethan Rarick, who researched Brown for the biography “California Rising.” He suggested the items on auction may come from someone in Brown’s administra­tion.

Peter Hanff, deputy director of UC-Berkeley’s Bancroft Library that houses Pat Brown’s archives, shared that sentiment.

“I’m guessing that someone in Pat Brown’s administra­tion probably just saved those pieces for autograph value,” Hanff said.

“There’s not as much value for research,” he said.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Sen. John F. Kennedy talks with California Gov. Edmund G. “Pat” Brown during a 1960 meeting in Los Angeles. Private letters and other items that had belonged to Brown when he was governor are being offered by the auction house Sotheby’s.
The Associated Press file Sen. John F. Kennedy talks with California Gov. Edmund G. “Pat” Brown during a 1960 meeting in Los Angeles. Private letters and other items that had belonged to Brown when he was governor are being offered by the auction house Sotheby’s.

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