Official Website: https://to.pbs.org/3ZCtZRu | #antiquesroadshow
Travel with ANTIQUES ROADSHOW to Bonanzaville in this Emmy® Award-nominated episode to experience the biggest find of Season 24, and watch as the owner is literally floored by the $500,000-$700,000 appraisal of their treasure! Highlights include a salesman sample bed frame ca. 1920, a Folk Art whirligig, ca. 1920, a curling iron warmer ca. 1930, a Dr. Seuss book ca. 1940, a New York Yankees team-signed baseball ca. 1930, a Leeching Chinese export silver cup, ca. 1870, 1962 & 1963 Charles White print portfolios, 1910 first North Dakota championship sticks, a Nicolai Fechin portrait of a young boy, ca. 1936, a Civil War blanket and soldiers memorial, a Japanese silk scarf ca. 193, a diamond ring ca. 1910, real photo boxing postcards, ca. 1910, a Vendex pencil vending machine, ca. 1925, an Andrew Loomis oil painting, ca. 1930, an Art Deco eglomisé mirror ca. 1930, Kenner “Star Wars” figures with a vinyl cape Jawa, a Lou Jacobs-signed circus poster ca. 1950, a Stickley Craftsman sideboard, ca. 1905, Coca-Cola original advertising art, ca. 1942, a Schafer’s combination-recreation board, ca. 1925, a 1916 Johannes Johnson violin, an 1884 John Wesley Wedgwood Jasperware plaque, and a Rolex Oyster cosmograph with documentation, ca. 1971. (Filmed 2019)
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Chapters
00:00 Open
00:30 ANTIQUES ROADSHOW Sponsor Message
01:46 Elgin Wall Clock ca. 1960
2:00 Salesman Sample Bed Frame ca. 1920
02:12 Folk Art Whirligig, ca. 1920
05:02 Curling Iron Warmer ca. 1930
05:18 Dr. Seuss Book ca. 1940
05:40 Yankees Team-signed Baseball ca. 1930
05:59 Leeching Chinese Export Silver Cup, ca. 1870
08:20 ANTIQUES ROADSHOW Sponsor Message
08:40 Factoid about Habberstad Log Cabin
9:06 1962 & 1963 Charles White Print Portfolios
12:27 1910 First North Dakota Championship Sticks
12:42 Silk Apron ca. 1850
13:01 Nicolai Fechin Portrait of a Young Boy, ca. 1936
15:36 Civil War Blanket & Soldiers Memorial
18:13 Japanese Silk Scarf ca. 1930
18:33 Diamond Ring ca. 1910
18:50 Factoid about Old Abe the Eagle
19:16 Real Photo Boxing Postcards, ca. 1910
22:22 Scrimshaw Objects ca. 1950
22:42 Ojibwe Beaded Vest ca. 1925
22:57 Vendex Pencil Vending Machine, ca. 1925
24:56 Andrew Loomis Oil Painting, ca. 1930
28:08 Art Deco Eglomisé Mirror ca. 1930
28:45 “Star Wars” Poster Reprint
29:21 Kenner “Star Wars” Figures with Vinyl Cape Jawa
32:07 Lou Jacobs-signed Circus Poster ca. 1950
32:33 Squirrel & Nut Serving Set ca. 1950
32:48 Stickley Craftsman Sideboard, ca. 1905
36:04 Mason Factory Blue Wing Teal Decoy ca. 1920
36:14 Stained Glass Window ca. 1910
37:00 Factoid about Bjerklie Drugstore
37:17 Coca-Cola Original Advertising Art, ca. 1942
38:52 Schafer’s Combination-Recreation Board, ca. 1925
41:51 Norwegian Trunk ca. 1815
42:13 1916 Johannes Johnson Violin
42:42 1884 John Wesley Wedgwood Jasperware Plaque
45:01 Factoid about the “Hunter Times” building
45:21 Rolex Oyster Cosmograph & Documentation, ca. 1971
51:42 Feedback Booth
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21 comments
Ah come on guys, if you’re going to post ancient reused pre-pandemic footage at least update the valuations 🤦🏻♀️ My antique collection is worthless now LOL
Another great episode of the David Walker Show!!
SELL THE WATCH!
mad about old footage? READ THE DESCRIPTION first. lol
The US veteran with the Rolex watch was the most glorious point of my day. Made me cry. He deserves this and so much more. God bless you sir & thank you for your service
❤️🇺🇸❤️
❤🇺🇸❤ ❤🇺🇸❤ ❤🇺🇸❤
Every episode is such a treat! Thanks Roadshow! Please keep the EPS coming.
23:34 "I've got 60,000 pencils" has gotta be a pickup line that never fails.
If I fainted like a woman I wouldn't want it on social media. That is even worse than a man crying.
We had a vending machine at my school in Jr high that sold pencils and comp-pads, that must have been from the early fifties. No glass, no frills, with that matt-crinckle finish that was popular at the time, but it looked more like a safe than a vending machine. It must have been military serplus or something because you'd think they would have made it more enticing, when it's selling something. I walked past it for months before realizing what it was😆
51:00 It might not have been worn MUCH, but it quite obviously has been worn. The logo on the band has been pretty worn down from wear.
Repost from how many years ago???
"Shoddy" was the name of a textile woven of shredded waste or used fabrics, so this blanket might well have been called a "shoddy blanket" originally. The name became a word meaning poor quality, because that's what the textile was.
The veteran scene always makes me laugh.
Good evening everyone
anybody willing to pay 4 to 6 thousand surely would consider paying 8 to 10 thousand…
No way the hockey sticks that low
25:10 -Wagging her finger ….. or angrily reading a text?
Perhaps the shoddy blanket has the corner missing so the wearer could reach his gun without the blanket being in the way. Did they wear guns on the hip like a cop during the civil war? Just a guess.
After the vet sells his Rolex he will have more than enough money to pay for a haircut! His fake fall needs a lot of work!
That vet and his Rolex watch is my favorite of all the antiques that have been featured in this show.
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