Pair of Kaiser Wilhelm II military helmets bring $30,250 at Mohawk Arms, June 1-2 A pair of helmets once owned and worn by Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II (1859-1941) sold for a combined $30,250 at a militaria auction held June 1-2 by Mohawk Arms, Inc., based in Bouckville, N.Y.
News-Antique.com - Jun 14,2012 - (BOUCKVILLE, N.Y.) – A pair of helmets once owned and worn by Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm II (1859-1941) sold for a combined $30,250 at a militaria auction held June 1-2 by Mohawk Arms, Inc. (www.militaryrelics.com). A Personal Garde Jager shako (leather helmet) fetched $13,750, while a Personal Garde Hussar busby (fur-covered helmet) brought $16,500.
The helmets were the top two achievers of the 1,700 or so lots of militaria that came up for bid. The auction – held at the Mohawk Arms gallery, located on Route 20 in Bouckville, in central New York State – was broad and sweeping. It spanned multiple generations and conflicts and was the 67th auction for Mohawk Arms, Inc., which typically conducts two auctions per year.
“Several categories did particularly well in this sale, among them medals and badges, ethnographic and edged weapons, and secondary market reference books,” said Raymond Zyla, owner of Mohawk Arms, Inc. “We’re seeing a growing number of collectors of medals and badges, and Asian ethnographic weapons that did well included daggers, bayonets and swords.”
About 40 people made the trip to the Bouckville gallery (including one bidder from Moscow, Russia and another from Calgary, Canada). Over 500 people registered to bid online, through LiveAuctioneers.com, and there were hundreds of left bids submitted. In addition, the phone banks were manned and busy all weekend. “It was one of our stronger sales,” Zyla said.
Following are additional highlights from the auction. Prices include a buyer’s premium that ranged from 10 to 17.5 percent, depending on the gaveled amount.
A group of German World War II assault badges, awarded based on the number of engagements recorded (50, 75, 100), was a big hit with collectors. Five brought prices ranging from $2,300 to $9,000. The $9,000 badge was a 100-engagement Panzer example, with a large eagle/swastika at the top of an oak leaf wreath holding a toned, silvered front view of a tank.
A lot of original property belonging to Lt. John H. Wilson, the American World War I 94th Squadron Observer and parachute pioneer, soared to $8,438. The archive included a rare “Fighting Observer” Wing, exquisitely chiseled with applied gold “US” letters, a World War I aviation uniform insignia, a dress sword presented to Lt. Wilson, and several original photos.
A German World War II Waffen-SS Feldgedarmerie-Trupp SS-Hauptscharfuhrer “wrapper” (or waist-length jacket) in a feld-grau material with a machine-sewn W-SS OR sleeve eagle, commanded $7,000; and a German World War II Waffen-SS Infantry peaked cap, with a photo of a young SS man wearing the hat, acquired from the man’s granddaughter, made $2,703.
A pair of pre-World War I Prussian helmets did well. One was a 1st Garde Regiment of Foot parade enlisted helmet, made around 1900 and styled after the popular 18th century German miter helmets ($2,703). The other was an Oldenburg 91st Regiment NCO helmet from the early 20th century with solid black body and two-piece silver state arms and brass chinscales ($2,875).
Civil War-related lots got paddles wagging. A snare drum