The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW COLLECTOR CREATED STAR-SPANGLED BUSINESS

Nation’s largest antique American flag dealer comes to Atlanta.

- By Frank Reddy For the AJC

Even at the age of 4, Jeff Bridgman found comfort in collecting.

He hunted and hoarded bottle caps and beer cans, keeping a watchful eye out for the good ones.

The child of a history buff and an avid collector, he was thirsty for the knowledge dispensed by his old man on countless trips to landmarks and battlefiel­ds and fascinated by the treasures brought home by his mother following successful antique store hauls.

Little did he know, Bridgman was destined to cultivate both this appreciati­on for American history and passion for accumulati­ng collectibl­es all the way into adulthood — and then some.

Now 49 years old and headquarte­red near Gettysburg, Pa., Bridgman is the nation’s largest collector and dealer of antique American flags, and he’s bringing a portion of his collection to Atlanta’s Cathedral Antiques Show, scheduled through Saturday for the exhibit portion. (There’s also a homes tour on Sunday.)

He’s among many other exhibitors at the 46th annual celebratio­n of art, antiques and floral and interior design, which also features a speaker series, flower festival and home tours. The show is a major outreach project sponsored by the Episcopal Church Women of the Cathedral of St. Philip, and it has raised more than $5 million for Atlanta-area nonprofits since 1969.

Bridgman has never attended

the local show, but is very excited about it.

“I’ve been to more than a thousand antique shows,” Bridgman said, adding that he has obtained his wealth of antique flags — at any given time, he’s in possession of more than 2,500 — from “every source under the sun, including private individual­s, old-time collectors, other dealers, pickers, estate attorneys, historical societies and auctions.”

He’s been in the antiques business for 27 years — about 18 of which he’s specialize­d in American flags. Bridgman said he was an Americana dealer who “got interested in the flag, because I was doing about 40 antique shows a year, and I never saw interestin­g flags … until one day.”

Bridgman described this chance encounter at an antique show, coming across two flags with circular star patterns and a full 50-star count, and being “blown away” that he didn’t know the pattern’s significan­ce.

“At the time, I was a budding Americana dealer and expert, and here I was … not knowing much of anything about early flags,” Bridgman said. “I soon came to find out nobody else seemed to know much about early flags either. There were only a couple people nationwide who knew much about antique flags in this business … the flag had gotten very little attention in general.”

Since that fateful day, Bridgman has come across “so many tremendous flags.”

Among them, one specifical­ly stood out: a flag made for Abraham Lincoln’s 1860 campaign, which will be on display at the antique show this week.

“I’ve sold many Lincoln campaign flags, but this is the best one that’s known of all that exist,” Bridgman said, describing the ancient iteration of Old Glory as being about 5 feet in length with a portrait of Lincoln emblazoned among the stars with the VP candidate in the stripes.

“Campaign flags were typically around 16 inches,” Bridgman said, excitement evident in his voice. “A 5-footer is almost unheard of.”

When it comes to spotting rare American flags or just the antiques business in general, colleague Ron Bassin said Bridgman has “gained a lot of respect from high-end buyers in the marketplac­e.”

Attracting high-end and high-dollar clients is important, as Bridgman’s flags can cost anywhere from $500 to nearly six figures.

“I’ve watched Jeff grow into one of the most trustworth­y guys in the business,” said Bassin, who owns an antique store in New Jersey and is also exhibiting for the first time this week at Atlanta’s Cathedral Antiques Show.

Featuring a mix of period furniture, garden antiques, jewelry, art, silver, and other accessorie­s from the past four centuries, the show kicked off with a special patron preview gala on Wednesday and opens for general admission at 10 a.m. Thursday, continuing through Saturday, with a homes tour on Sunday.

The 2017 show features a flower festival theme with floral designs throughout by leading garden clubs.

Bridgman said Atlanta’s Cathedral Antiques Show has been on his radar for a while, but this will be the first time he’s visited Georgia, other than “going through the airport a zillion times.”

Just as with any other antique show, Bridgman feels a certain excitement as the date nears. He’s come a long way since bottle caps and beer cans, but it’s that same enthusiasm for finding and gathering collectibl­es that’s sustained him through nearly two decades of dealing in antique flags.

“There’s always something new to be found,” Bridgman said. “There’s always something unique and interestin­g coming out of the woodwork, and it’s a never-ending thrill finding something you’ve never seen before.”

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM ?? Jeff Bridgman, 49, owner of Jeff R. Bridgman Antiques Inc., is the nation’s largest collector and dealer of antique American flags, and he’s bringing a portion of his collection to the 2017 Cathedral Antiques Show.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM Jeff Bridgman, 49, owner of Jeff R. Bridgman Antiques Inc., is the nation’s largest collector and dealer of antique American flags, and he’s bringing a portion of his collection to the 2017 Cathedral Antiques Show.
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 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM ?? At the 2017 Cathedral Antiques Show in Atlanta, Jeff Bridgman shows off a piece of a sash that had been worn during the women’s suffrage movement in the early 20th century.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM At the 2017 Cathedral Antiques Show in Atlanta, Jeff Bridgman shows off a piece of a sash that had been worn during the women’s suffrage movement in the early 20th century.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? This silk Civil War battle flag of the Green Mountain Boys features a portrait of George Washington and “whimsical gold text surrounded by a Southern-exclusiona­ry count of 20 stars,” according to the listing on Jeff Bridgman’s website. It was made...
CONTRIBUTE­D This silk Civil War battle flag of the Green Mountain Boys features a portrait of George Washington and “whimsical gold text surrounded by a Southern-exclusiona­ry count of 20 stars,” according to the listing on Jeff Bridgman’s website. It was made...

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