Philip Weiss Auctions back up and running after Hurricane Sandy Philip Weiss Auctions – down but definitely not out following Hurricane Sandy – has a full slate of auctions planned for the rest of winter and early spring, at its new gallery in Lynbrook, New York.
News-Antique.com - Feb 14,2013 - (LYNBROOK, N.Y.) – Philip Weiss Auctions – down but definitely not out following Hurricane Sandy – has a full slate of auctions planned for the rest of winter and early spring, in its new gallery at 74 Merrick Road in Lynbrook. The new facility is located not too far from its former building, in Oceanside, which was decimated by the storm that forced the firm to vacate.
“It was hard saying good-bye to our old home,” Philip Weiss said wistfully from his new digs in Lynbrook. “After all, we’d been there for over 25 years, holding consistent, monthly auctions. But life goes on, and we’re settling in nicely, looking forward to a series of sales that will let people know, in no uncertain terms, that we’re back. I think 2013 will be a great year.”
Actually, Philip Weiss Auctions has already conducted a few small, online-only auctions since the move to Lynbrook, but it is now ready to return to full-bore, live-audience bidding. First up will be a sale dedicated to rare books, historical memorabilia, autographs, stamps, coins and postcards scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 26, with a rare afternoon start time of 3 p.m. (EST).
Two auctions are planned for March. On Sunday, March 10, at 10 a.m., hundreds of lots of toys, trains and toy soldiers will cross the block. Then, on Saturday, March 30, also at 10 a.m., the focus will shift to comics, comic art, sports and non-sports cards and animation art. That will be followed by a massive vintage poster auction, to be held sometime in April (date still TBA).
The Feb. 26 sale will be packed with historical and presidential memorabilia, including a postcard handwritten by JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, some JFK material, a rare painting of Pres. James Madison attributed to Samuel Morse, a single-owner collection of political buttons, presidential and political documents and a super U.S. Supreme Court archive, with 42 signatures.
Other highlights will feature a $400,000 collection of U.S. entires and cut corner stamps, a single-owner Hong Kong stamp collection estimated at $25,000-$35,000 and many group stamp lots. Gold and silver coins and paper currency will also be sold. Items of interest will include an Apollo 11 autographed program and Cole Porter’s traveling gambling game set.
The rare books category will boast a collection of high-end color plate books, and many better volumes of Americana and literature, to include Oriental Field Sports by Capt. Thomas Williamson and Samuel Howitt; Martial Achievements by James Jenkins; Lives of the Queens of England by Agnes Strickland; an Ernest Hemingway archive and a Matthew Brady archive.
The day will also feature four or five original Charles Schulz Peanuts comic strips, some vintage photographs, thousands of postcards, a collection of Sinsabaugh signed photos and more.
The March 10 auction of toys, trains and toy soldiers will showcase a dazzling array of material, to include a 1954 Superman vs. the Robot metal lunch box, a Corgi Batman helicopter and Barboat and Corgi Batmobile and Batboat gift