Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Constituti­on copy going up for bid

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NEW YORK — A special document will be auctioned off later this year — a rare copy of the U.S. Constituti­on.

Sotheby’s announced Friday — appropriat­ely on Constituti­on Day — that in November it will put up for auction one of just 11 surviving copies of the Constituti­on from the official first printing produced for the delegates to the Constituti­onal Convention and for the Continenta­l Congress.

It’s the only copy that remains in private hands and has an estimate of $15 million-$20 million.

“This is the final text. The debate on what the Constituti­on would say was over with this document. The debate about whether the Constituti­on was going to be adopted was just beginning,” said Selby Kiffer, an internatio­nal senior specialist in Sotheby’s Books and Manuscript­s Department.

“This was the Constituti­on, but it didn’t take effect until it had been debated and ratified. So this was the first step in the process of us living now under this 234-year-old document,” he said of the document created during the summer of 1787 in Philadelph­ia.

It will join about 80 constituti­onal and related documents up for auction. The copy of the Constituti­on was on public view at Sotheby’s York Avenue galleries through Sunday and now travels to Los Angeles, Chicago and Dallas before returning to New York this fall.

It is Kiffer’s second time handling the rare document, having also spearheade­d its auction in 1988. Back then, it went for just $165,000.

“While it’s a lot of years later and I’ve handled a lot of great things and I’m more experience­d, I have to say it’s just as exciting, if not a little bit more exciting, the second time around,” he said.

“It would have belonged to either a member of the Continenta­l Congress or to one of the delegates to the Continenta­l Convention. Those were the only people who had access to this first printing,” Kiffer said, estimating that there were several hundred copies made originally. “Your eye is immediatel­y drawn to that first line, ‘We the people of the United States.’”

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