Looking for a good collector’s reference? Antique Trader Editor Eric Bradley spent some time reviewing selections from Shop.Collect.com (the official online
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store of Antique Trader), and he’s come up with a list of recommended references. Even better, you can save 10 percent and receive FREE SHIPPING on your order.
Author Russell E. Lewis spends much of his detailed
introduction explaining the hobby’s evolution over the last 150 years;
it was the soldiers themselves who were the original keepers of
artifacts from the American Civil War. As America healed, collectors
passion heated up as they worked to find new items tied to major
battles, soldiers and officers and historical events. Lewis writes:
“early collectors gathered representative weapons, collected
battlefield-found relics, and created personal or public memorials to
the veterans.”
Lewis illustrates collector’s passions through a few novel approaches in
his book. Structured more like a coffee table book than a static price
guide, Lewis starts his book with a look at groupings and special items.
This first chapter is a visual treat of ensembles based primarily on
provenance. It’s exciting to see stunning Civil War uniforms but the
special groupings show off the fruits of collectors’ dedication. Some
groupings took years and several thousand dollars to pull together and
have all the quality and attention to detail as the work of a
professional archivist.
Chapter 9, which focuses on Civil War-era ephemera, is interesting and
diverse. Other chapters that stand out with exceptional information
focus on medical instruments, personal items, pistols and revolvers,
swords and cutlasses and sabers and uniforms. Lewis uses prices gleaned
by the nation’s top auction houses as well as opinions of the nation’s
top dealers and collectors. In some cases he provides a set value, based
on an auctioneer’s hammer price. In other instances, he gives a range
of value. This would probably help most collectors when pricing their
items or buying more common artifacts.
Most refreshingly, Lewis does not for one minute lament the state of the
hobby. Instead, he celebrates the current era by stating “at no moment
in time since the Civil War has so much information and material been
available at a single instant.” This is an important fact and one that
compliments another of Lewis’ main points: we live in an era in which
longtime collections are “reemerging” onto the market. “The fabulous
collections of relics assembled in the 1940s and 1950s are reappearing.”
Lewis’ book works hard to deliver a detailed cross section of the Civil
War collectibles hobby. Where it succeeds the most is inspiring readers
who will learn that the two most important factors influencing the value
of Civil War collectibles is provenance and condition. It is here Lewis
emphasizes condition which, he says, “its importance seems to be
universally lost upon many, if not most, collectors. As such, values in
items in superb condition are priced several factors higher than those
in poor condition. It is also true that Civil War items are much more
difficult to locate due to a variety of reasons spelled out in the book.
However, those reasons shouldn’t deter a new collector from jumping in
to the market.
With Lewis’ book in tow, the battle is half won.