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Miscellaneous Autographs
Click on
one of the links below to go to the appropriate page. I am in the process of
adding new autographs to each of these pages plus moving the autographs on this
page to it's appropriate page. When all are moved to the proper page, this page
will be reserved for special items.
Featured
Astronauts
Entertainers
Political
Sports
Miscellaneous

This page features
miscellaneous autographs.. To visit any of the other special interest pages,
please click on the appropriate blue link above.
A number of the
vintage autographs in this area came from two old autograph books I acquired in the
early 1960's and from a collection of many insignificant personal letters and
documents an uncle of mine collected. Unfortunately my uncle clipped all of the
signatures from the letters and documents. As I understand, sometime during WWII
in Atlanta, Georgia, my uncle bought a collection of 5 bound volumes of Civil
War era Harper's Weekly and several boxes of miscellaneous material. The
collection of personal letters were in that miscellaneous material.
If the item is
pictured on a descriptive album page, that item comes in a heavy poly holder
punched to fit a standard 3-ring binder. The ones with a brief description at
the bottom are 8.5" x 5.5" (like Robert Baden-Powell, below) and the ones that have
lengthy descriptions (like Mario Andretti in Sports) are 8.5" x 11." If the
autographed item is too large for the album page, it will be included in the
poly holder. On ones that are affixed to the album page, they can be easily
removed without damage.
Shipping and
Insurance on any of these items is $6.00 per order domestic and $12.50 per order
foreign.
To Order
Cy
Stapleton - Box 151107 - Lufkin, TX 75915-1107 - 936-676-6375 -
cy@hotlinecy.com
We accept
PayPal (username is
info@cytreasures.com), Discover, MasterCard, Visa, AmEx, Checks, Money
Orders, and Wire Transfers.
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$150.00
SOLD |
Robert Baden-Powell -
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron
Baden-Powell
OM,
GCMG,
GCVO,
KCB (22 February 1857
– 8 January 1941), also known as "B-P,"
was a
lieutenant-general in
the
British Army, writer,
and founder of the
Scout Movement.
After having been educated at
Charterhouse School,
Baden-Powell served in the British Army from 1876 until 1910 in India and
Africa. In 1899, during the
Second Boer War in
South Africa,
Baden-Powell successfully defended the city in the
Siege of Mafeking.
Several of his military books, written for
military
reconnaissance and
scout training in his African years, were also read by boys. Based on those
earlier books, he wrote
Scouting for Boys,
published in 1908 by
Pearson, for youth
readership. During writing, he tested his ideas through a
camping trip on Brownsea Island
that began on 1 August 1907, which is now seen as the beginning of Scouting.
After his marriage with
Olave St Clair Soames,
Baden-Powell, his sister
Agnes Baden-Powell
and notably his wife actively gave guidance to the Scouting Movement and the
Girl Guides Movement.
Baden-Powell lived his last years in
Nyeri,
Kenya, where he died
in 1941.
This outstanding autograph was
clipped from a vintage album and it has a sketch of a Boy Scout that
Baden-Powell drew. It is mounted on a descriptive album page and is in a
heavy poly holder punched to fit a standard 8.5" 5.5" ring binder. |
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$10.00 |
Ernst Otto Fischer
(November
10,
1918 –
July 23,
2007) was a
German
chemist who won the
Nobel Prize for pioneering work in the area of
organometallic chemistry.
He was born in
Solln, near
Munich. His parents
were Karl T. Fischer, Professor of Physics at the
Technical University of Munich
(TU), and Valentine née Danzer. He graduated in 1937 with Abitur.
Before the completion of two years'
compulsory military service,
the
Second World War
broke out, and he served in Poland, France, and Russia. During a period of
study leave, towards the end of 1941 he began to study chemistry at the
Technical University of Munich.
Following the end of the War, he was released by the Americans in the autumn
of 1945 and resumed his studies, graduating in 1949.
This bold signature is mounted on a
descriptive album page that is in a heavy poly holder punched to fit a
standard 8.5" 5.5" 3-ring binder
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$17.50 |
Scott Crossfield - |
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$15.00 |
Michael DeBakey - |
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$395.00 |
Sir
Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle, (22 May 1859 – 7
July 1930) was an author most noted for his stories about the
detective
Sherlock Holmes,
which are generally considered a major innovation in the field of
crime fiction, and
for the adventures of
Professor Challenger.
He was a prolific writer whose other works include
science fiction
stories,
historical novels,
plays and romances, poetry, and non-fiction.
This nice bold signature was clipped from a letter. A
Doyle signature is valued in excess of $500.00.
The signature comes with a descriptive
album page in a heavy poly holder that is punched to fit a standard 8.5" x
5.5" ring binder. |
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$49.00 |
Sir Edmund Percival Hillary
KG,
ONZ,
KBE (20 July 1919 –
11 January 2008) was a
New Zealand
mountaineer and
explorer. On 29 May 1953 at the age of 33, he and
Sherpa mountaineer
Tenzing Norgay became
the
first climbers known
to have reached the summit of
Mount Everest. They
were part of the ninth British expedition to Everest, led by
John Hunt.
Hillary became interested in mountaineering while in
secondary school, making his first major climb in 1939, reaching the summit
of
Mount Ollivier. He
served in the
RNZAF as a
navigator during
World War II. Before the successful expedition in 1953 to Everest, he had
been part of a reconnaissance expedition to the mountain in 1951 and an
unsuccessful attempt to climb
Cho Oyu in 1952. As
part of the
Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition
he reached the
South Pole overland
in 1958. He would later also travel to the
North Pole.
Following his ascent of Everest he devoted much of
his life to helping the
Sherpa people of
Nepal through the
Himalayan Trust,
which he founded. Through his efforts many schools and hospitals were built
in this remote region of Nepal.
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$15.00 |
George
Ludwig - |
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$35.00 |
Dr.
Benjamin Spock - |
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$450.00 |
Samuel Langhorne Clemens
(November 30, 1835 – April 21, 1910), better known by the
pen name Mark
Twain, was an
American
author and
humorist. Twain is
most noted for his novels
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,
which has since been called the
Great American Novel,
and
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
He is extensively quoted. During his lifetime, Twain became a friend to
presidents, artists,
industrialists and European royalty. Twain
enjoyed immense public popularity, and his keen wit and incisive satire
earned him praise from both critics and peers. American author
William Faulkner
called Twain "the father of
American literature."
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$19.00 |
Hamilton Osgood - Medical Interest - Introduced Rabies vaccination to
the US. Great 4-page handwritten letter. |
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$25.00 |
Arthur Schawlow - |
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$35.00 |
Baruj Benacerraf - A Venezuelan-American immunologist who won the 1980
Nobel Prize for the discovery of the genes that govern transplant rejection.
He served as a physician in the U.S. Army from 1945 through 1948. |
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$20.00 |
Billy Graham
- This is a great unsigned official military photo of Rev. Billy Graham
visiting with Korean Communication Zone commanding general, Thomas Herren.
This meeting was December 19, 1952 in Taegu, South Korea. |
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$15.00 |
Robert Gale
- An award winning physician who studied
leukemia and other bone
marrow disorders (such as aplastic anemia) for over 35
years. He and his colleagues have contributed to the understanding of the
molecular biology and immunology of leukemia. |
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$45.00 |
Frank Buck (March
7,
1884 –
March 25,
1950) was a hunter
and "collector of wild animals," as well as a movie actor, director, writer
and producer. He is probably most famous for his book Bring 'Em Back
Alive and his 1930s and 40s jungle adventure movies including: Wild
Cargo, Jungle Cavalcade, Jacare, and Killer of the
Amazon, many of which included staged "fights to the death" between
formidable beasts. Born in
Gainesville, Texas,
Buck grew up in Dallas and excelled in
geography, at the
cost of "utter failure on all the other subjects of that limited Dallas
curriculum." While still a child, Buck began
collecting birds and small animals, and tried his hand at farming before
getting a job as a
cowpuncher.
Accompanying a cattlecar to the Chicago stockyards, he refused to take the
trip back to Texas, and spent the rest of his days supporting himself on
various jobs while seeking adventure. In 1911, he won $3,500 in a poker game
and decided to go overseas for the first time, leaving his wife and setting
out for Brazil.
Bringing back exotic birds to New York, he was
surprised by the amount of his profits. Trips to Singapore followed, and he
traveled the world for 18 years, until the stock market crash of 1929 left
him penniless. However, friends lent him $6,000 and soon he was back to his
profitable work.
When war correspondent Floyd Gibbons suggested that
Buck write about his adventures, he collaborated with Edward Anthony on
Bring 'Em Back Alive, which became a bestseller starting in 1930. While
the book made him world famous, Buck would say later that he was prouder of
his 1936 elementary school reader, On Jungle Trails, saying "Wherever
I go, children mention this book to me and tell me how much they learned
about animals and the jungle from it." Buck's
autobiography, "All in a Lifetime," was published in 1941.
In 1938,
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
made Buck a lucrative offer to tour as their star attraction, and he would
enter the show astride an elephant. He refused to join the
American Federation of Actors,
stating that he was "a scientist, not an actor." Though there was a threat
of a strike if he did not join the union, he maintained that it would
compromise his principles, saying "Don't get me wrong. I'm with the working
man. I worked like a dog once myself. And my heart is with the fellow who
works. But I don't want some --- union delegate telling me when to get on
and off an elephant." Eventually, the union
gave Buck a special dispensation to introduce Gargantua the gorilla without
registering as an actor.
Buck appeared as himself in the 1949 movie
Africa Screams (also known as "Abbott and Costello in Africa"), although
most of his adventures collecting exotic animals took place in Asia. He was
played by
Bruce Boxleitner in
the 1982/83 adventure series,
Bring 'Em Back Alive.
The Frank Buck Zoo in Gainesville (initially
populated with retired circus animals) is named in his honor.
The menagerie retrieved by Frank Buck for the
world's zoos and circuses is impressive. He estimated that in his years of
hunting, he had brought back alive 49
elephants, 60
tigers, 63
leopards, 20
hyenas, 52
orangutans, 100
gibbon
apes, 20
tapirs, 120
Asiatic
antelope and
deer, 9
pigmy water buffalo,
a pair of
gaurs, 5
Babirusa wild asian
swine, 18
African
antelope, 40
wild goats and
sheep, 11
camels, 2
giraffes, 40
kangaroos and
wallabies, 5
Indian
rhinoceroses, 60
bears, 90
pythons, 10
king cobras, 25
giant
monitor lizards, 15
crocodiles, more than
500 different species of other
mammals, and more
than 100,000
wild birds.
Although his life was an adventurous one, and he
reported many brushes with danger, Frank Buck died in bed from
lung cancer brought
about by a lifetime of cigarette smoking.
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$30.00 |
Herbert Brown - Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1979) |
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$15.00 |
Walter Hohlweg - Invented the pill. Died in 1992 |
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$125.00
SOLD |
Sir Robert
Howard - 1626-1698 - Rare autograph on a part of a letter, dated May 22,
1676. Howard was a dramatist, politician, and Auditor of the Exchequer.
As the 18-year-old son of a
royalist family, he
fought at the
battle of Cropredy Bridge
and was knighted for the bravery he showed there. In the
years after the
English Civil War his
royalist sympathies led to his imprisonment at
Windsor Castle in
1658.
After the
Restoration, he
quickly rose to prominence in political life, with several appointments to
posts which brought him influence and money. He was Member of Parliament for
Stockbridge, and
believed in a balance of parliament and monarchy. All his life he continued
in a series of powerful positions; in 1671 he became
secretary to the Treasury,
and in 1673
auditor of the Exchequer.
He helped bring
William of Orange to
the throne and was made a
privy councillor in
1689. His interest in financial matters continued, and in later life he
subscribed to the newly founded
Bank of England while
continuing his work on currency reform.
He was thought of as arrogant and was caricatured
in a play by
Shadwell as Sir
Positive-At-All, a boastful knight. Howard died on
September 3,
1698 and is buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Comes with a descriptive 8" x 10" album page. |
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$75.00 |
Carl Sandburg
was born in
Galesburg,
Illinois to
Swedish immigrants.
At the age of thirteen he left school and began driving a milk wagon. He
subsequently became a bricklayer and a farm laborer on the wheat plains of
Kansas.[1]
After an interval spent at
Lombard College in
Galesburg,[2]
he became a hotel servant in
Denver, then a
coal-heaver in Omaha. He began his writing career as a
journalist for the
Chicago Daily News.
Later he wrote poetry,
history,
biography,
novels,
children's literature,
and
film
reviews. Sandburg
also collected and edited books of
ballads and
folklore. He spent
most of his life in the
Midwest before moving
to
North Carolina.
He fought in the
Spanish-American War
with the 6th Illinois Infantry, and participated in the invasion of
Guánica,
Puerto Rico on
July 25,
1898. He attended
West Point for just
two weeks and was expelled for failing mathematics
and a grammar exam. He returned to Galesburg and
entered
Lombard College, but
left without a degree in 1903.
He moved to
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
and joined the
Social Democratic Party.
Sandburg served as a secretary to Mayor
Emil Seidel,
mayor of Milwaukee
from 1910 to 1912; Seidel was the first person to be elected mayor of a U.S.
city on a
socialist platform.
Sandburg met Lilian Steichen at the Social
Democratic Party office in 1907, and they married the next year. Lilian's
brother was the photographer
Edward Steichen.
Sandburg with his wife, whom he called Paula, raised three daughters.
He moved to
Harbert, Michigan,
and then suburban
Chicago, Illinois.
They lived in
Evanston, Illinois
before settling at 331 S. York Street in
Elmhurst, Illinois
from 1919 to 1930. Sandburg wrote three children's books in Elmhurst,
Rootabaga Stories, in 1922, followed by Rootabaga Pigeons (1923),
and Potato Face (1930). He also wrote
Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, a two volume biography in 1926,
The American Songbag (1927), and a book of poems Good Morning,
America (1928) in Elmhurst. The family moved to Michigan in 1930. The
Sandburg's house at 331 S. York Street, Elmhurst was demolished and the site
is now a parking lot.
He moved to a
Flat Rock, North Carolina
estate,
Connemara, in 1945
and lived there until his death in 1967.
Comes with a descriptive 8" x
10" album page. |
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$140.00 |
Eugene O'Neil
(16 October 1888 – 27 November 1953)
was an American playwright, and
Nobel laureate in
Literature. His plays
are among the first to introduce into American drama the techniques of
realism, associated
with Russian playwright
Anton Chekhov,
Norwegian playwright
Henrik Ibsen, and
Swedish playwright
August Strindberg.
His plays were among the first to include speeches in American
vernacular. His plays
involve characters who inhabit the fringes of
society, engaging in
depraved behavior, where they struggle to maintain their hopes and
aspirations but ultimately slide into disillusionment and despair. O'Neill
wrote only one well-known comedy (Ah,
Wilderness!): nearly all his other
plays involve some degree of
tragedy and personal
pessimism.
Comes with a descriptive 8" x 10"
album page. |
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