TITLE: What's in your closet? Study up before selling your military collectibles
A U.S. flag that flew from a control boat on D-Day sold at auction in June for a whopping $514,000, more than five times the pre-auction estimate of $100,000.
While the sizable sum stunned the auction house — Heritage Auctions in Dallas — as well as collectors, few were as surprised as Jon Vander Beek. The son of the landing craft’s skipper, Lt. Howard Vander Beek, had sold the flag pictured at the top of this page just seven months before for $35,000.
“We received tens of thousands of dollars for it, but we certainly didn’t get a half a million!” Jon Vander Beek said after being told the amount.
A few weeks before the Vander Beek sale, another flag was auctioned off, one purported to be the last U.S. battle flag to leave Vietnam. It sold for $55,000, more than three times the pre-auction estimate and twice the amount the family of Army Col. Chester McCoid received two months before at an estate auction, where they sold a cache of militaria that belonged to McCoid, including the flag and his jump uniform from Normandy.
Finding the flag alone brought $55K, McCoid’s son, Scott McCoid, of Ivoryton, Connecticut, said he was disappointed.
“We sold my father’s collection to pay for my mother’s assisted living facility. Those places are really expensive,” McCoid said.
Closets, attics and basements in America are often chock-full of the mementos of war, from military uniforms and artifacts to medals and war booty. While many of the items simply have sentimental value, others carry significant monetary worth.
Auctioneers and appraisers warn that before families consider selling any military collection, they should take steps to protect their assets to ensure they get top dollar.
Antiques appraiser Lori Verderame, “Dr. Lori” on the Discovery Channel’s Auction Kings, said families often underestimate the value of items, dismissing them as junk, or they seek a quick sale at a local auctioneer who may not be an expert in the collectible they are trying to sell.
“This happens all the time,” she said, referring to the Vander Beek and McCoid family experiences. “Everybody thinks [appraisers and auctioneers] work for them, but the truth is, most folks who are appraising also are buying and selling. They have a skin in the game.”
According to Verderame, the McCoids made a mistake by selling the colonel’s memorabilia through a local auction house that specializes in estate auctions, rather than having the collection appraised by an expert in military memorabilia.
The flag that netted more than $55,000 had stood behind McCoid’s desk at his field headquarters in South Vietnam. The colonel took it before he jumped on a plane in Da Nang on March 29, 1973.
Vietnam American flag
Alleged to be the last American flag to leave the field in Vietnam, returned to the U.S. by Col. Chester B. McCoid who helped negotiate peace terms and the withdrawal of American troops. The flag netted more than $55,000 at auction, purchased from a collector who had obtained it at an auction house in Connecticut. (PRNewsFoto/Alexander Historical Auctions L)
Photo Credit: PR NEWSWIRE
The McCoids sold the colonel’s collection at Ingraham Auctions in Coventry, Connecticut, where a collector picked up the flag. Eight months later, it was listed for sale in a catalogue by Alexander Historical Auctions, Chesapeake City, Maryland, as “a startling relic of a desperate war.”
According to Alexander Historical Auctions president Bill Panagopulos, he obtained the gold-fringed flag from the person who bought it at the Connecticut sale. Panagopulos’ pre-auction estimate for the item was $10,000, but he admitted he really could not accurately predict the final sale.
“I didn’t really know how much it would sell for. The American flag Jim Craig wore when the United States beat the Soviet Union in the Olympics sold for $1 million, and this is, in my mind, a more important piece of history,” Panagopolus said just before the online auction went live.
Panagopolus and the unnamed original purchaser cleaned up in the deal. The original auction house made some money, and so did the family, but not the tens of thousands they could have made, Verderame said.
Their first mistake was not having McCoid’s collection appraised by reputable experts, she said.
“The auction house they used was not the type that would focus on the value of a military collection,” she said. “Even most quote 'antique experts' are not experts in every type of antique, so they should have consulted with a reputable dealer, a militaria shop or an independent appraiser.”
Verderame, who has her doctorate in art history and has built a brand as an appraiser, runs a video chat appraisal service and personal consulting firm to help clients determine the worth of their goods.
The Appraisers Association of America also offers a search function to find experts in collectibles and antiques.
Knowing an item’s value can help an owner negotiate a consignment or determine whether they have found the right dealer to sell their collectible, either at a shop or through an auction.
But these options involve a middle man, as Verderame points out, and for some families, this may be the easiest route, having someone else deal with the sale.
To get the most out of a sale, she says, families should find auction houses that specialize in what they are trying to sell, or sell the items themselves on a site like eBay.
They would need to do the appropriate research and have the item or items appraised, and market it with a written appraisal to draw collectors. Verderame says the item then could be listed on eBay with a reserve price that guarantees it could sell for its worth.
Consumer Reports has published a handy "how-to" guide along with a flow chart to determine the best outlet for selling antiques, collectibles, and even household junk.
TSgt Joe C. SFC William Farrell SSG James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4"
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel LTC Stephen F. SSG Warren Swan PO2 Ed C.SMSgt Minister Gerald A. Thomas
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ENS (Join to see)Panagopolus says that long before any sale occurs, whether it be on eBay or at an auction house or estate sale, family members should sit down with their loved ones to discuss items in a house, their value and their histories.
“Some people just don’t know what they have,” he said.