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Follow on Google News | Superheroes – Real & Imagined – Lead Hake’s July 14-16 Pop Culture, Historical & Sports AuctionFeatured: Book MLK inscribed to Chief Justice Earl Warren, rarities from Franco Toscanini Superman collection, personal archive of ‘best baseball player of all time’
By: Hake’s Americana & Collectibles The centerpiece among the many important civil rights mementos entered in the 2,600-lot sale is a 1958 first edition of Dr. King’s Stride Toward Freedom, which the civil rights icon signed and gifted to US Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren a few months after its publication. Warren’s leadership was widely credited with the passage in 1954 of Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark bill that banned segregation in public schools. In a bold hand, Dr. King inscribed the book: “To: Justice Earl Warren, In appreciation for your genuine good-will, your great humanitarian concern, and for your unswerving devotion to the sublime principles of our American democracy. With warm Regards, Martin L. King Jr.” Held in Justice Warren’s personal library for a lifetime and now consigned to auction by the Warren family, the book is a unique cultural artifact and estimated at $20,000-$35,000. As was the case with Dr. King, there were no footsteps to follow for “El Maestro,” Martin Dihigo (Cuban, 1906-1971). His plaque at Cooperstown describes the five-nation Hall of Famer as “the most versatile of all Negro League players.” Along with Babe Ruth, Dihigo is regarded as one of the greatest two-way players in baseball history. His fellow HOFer Buck Leonard summed it up concisely when he described Dihigo as “the best ballplayer of all time, black or white.” “Hake’s is tremendously proud to be auctioning Martin Dihigo’s personal memorabilia archive on behalf of the Dihigo family,” said Hake’s President Alex Winter. “In part, it documents a remarkable career through 1940s team photos of Martin with the Havana Lions and Cienfuegos Elephants in Cuba, and later with the Mexican League’s Xalapa Chileros. But in addition, the archive includes the 1920s-era baseball cards that Martin collected as a teenager. Never before have we ever encountered anything like this, where a baseball player’s memorabilia includes his boyhood collection of baseball cards.” Photos include an 8 x 10 matte-finish shot of the Havana Lions, signed and annotated by Dihigo. It is one of three different known Cuban League team premiums issued in early 1923 by the Cuban newspaper La Discusion and is quite likely the earliest depiction of a then 17-year-old Dihigo as a professional player. Estimate: $10,000-$20,000. Dihigo’s personally compiled photo album from his 1925-26 season chronicles his travels in the US and Cuba while playing for the Negro League Cuban Stars and Cuban League Marianao Tigers. The 40-photograph album is expected to make $10,000-$20,000. Completing the triumvirate of superheroes featured in Hake’s auction is the one and only Man of Steel, represented by an extraordinary collection of Superman items amassed by the late Ken “Franco” Toscanini. While he did not begin collecting until 1992, Toscanini made up for it in a hurry. He became the ubiquitous figure at comic book shops, collector shows and conventions who wanted anything and everything – early or modern – that pertained to Superman. Over time, Toscanini’s vast collection incorporated not only comics, but also premiums, licensed merchandise, movie promos, original art and anything offbeat or rare emblazoned with the trademark “S.” And then there are the three items that Winter says are “unlikely to be seen at auction again, because no collector is going to give them up.” One is a 1948 Superman movie serial standee – one of two known – with busy, colorful graphics and an image of the villainous Spider Lady in the background. The other two items referenced by Winter are Fleischer Studios original color model art for Superman ($10,000-$20,000) A blue-chip name in Disney collectibles – the Doug and Pat Wengel collection – attracted collectors in droves to Hake’s last auction and set the bar exceedingly high for future consignors. That good-natured but daunting challenge has now been answered by the superb offering of rare Disney items available in Hake’s July sale. A sampling of highlights includes a first-edition 1939 Pinocchio hardcover book signed and inscribed by Walt Disney ($2,000-$5,000) A magnificent, complete set of Old King Cole store displays replicating Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is the only known set of its type to include all of the figures. There are eight painted composition displays of the beloved cartoon characters plus two painted fiberboard displays of quaint cottages, each of a different style and color. The Snow White lot is estimated at $10,000-$20,000. The Disney section also contains some of the most desirable character ceramics ever to pass through Hake’s gallery, starting with a circa-1932 Rosenthal porcelain figure of a broadly grinning Mickey Mouse holding an oversize six-shooter, estimate $2,000-$5,000; Hake’s Americana Auction #215 has opened for bidding by phone, mail or online at www.hakes.com. The first session will close on July 14, 2015, while the second session will conclude on July 16. July 15 is an interim day in which bidders can peruse the catalog and prepare for further bidding. To request a free printed catalog or for information on any item in the sale, call toll-free: (866) 404-9800 or (717) 434-1600. Email: hakes@hakes.com. Visit the catalog online at www.hakes.com. End
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