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  • - Well, obviously, all we got here is a chair.

  • JERRY: It's a chair.

  • One of the most famous chairs you'll ever see.

  • Oh, really?

  • JERRY: Abraham Lincoln sat on it while he

  • was in the White House.

  • OK.

  • I'm sure he sat in a lot of chairs.

  • JERRY: It comes from a set of chairs that was in the White

  • House while he was president.

  • I'm asking $2,000 for the chair, that's

  • the lowest amount of money and I'm

  • willing to take for the chair.

  • MAN: That is really neat.

  • This was in the White House?

  • JERRY: It was in the formal dining room.

  • MAN: OK.

  • That's pretty interesting.

  • I mean, you don't think about it now,

  • but the furniture was a big deal back then.

  • It was really, really expensive.

  • JERRY: It was.

  • MAN: The things people--

  • you know, well off people did-- they spent money on furniture

  • and silverware and luxury items around the house

  • because there was no TV at night,

  • so people entertained every night.

  • So those things were very important.

  • JERRY: Right.

  • MAN: Presidential memorabilia sells for good money.

  • But Abraham Lincoln, that's some money.

  • So if we can actually tie this chair to Abraham Lincoln,

  • there is value here--

  • serious value.

  • You've got documentation for this?

  • JERRY: Yes, sir. MAN: What do you have?

  • JERRY: One letter is from the White House telling

  • the individuals that they didn't want

  • the chairs there because they had too much furniture.

  • But then I have the original newspaper clipping where

  • Robert Todd Lincoln donated them to a girls'

  • school up in Vermont.

  • MAN: OK.

  • Do you have any other proof that it's his or--

  • No.

  • MAN: OK.

  • How much were were you looking to get out of it?

  • $2,000.

  • MAN: $2,000?

  • Doesn't sound out of the realm of possibility.

  • But my problem is your paperwork.

  • Do you mind if I call someone to take a look at them?

  • He runs the Clark County Museum system here.

  • He's an amazing historian.

  • And he could probably tell me everything about them.

  • JERRY: I have no problem with that.

  • I'm welcoming the fact for somebody

  • to come and look at the chair.

  • Any expert that they want to bring in, bring them on.

  • MAN: I really want this to be Abraham Lincoln's chair,

  • but I'm a little concerned over his paperwork.

  • So I called him my friend Mark to look at this thing.

  • There's a possibility that Abraham Lincoln's

  • butt touched this thing.

  • [laughter]

  • MARK: There are high points in every chair's life, I guess.

  • When you're dealing with presidents

  • of the United States, nobody has a bigger

  • name than Abraham Lincoln.

  • Anything related to Abraham Lincoln is hugely popular.

  • So do you have any paperwork that goes along with this?

  • JERRY: Yes.

  • I have this over here.

  • Let's take a look here.

  • Oh, OK.

  • That's a well-known photograph.

  • This is one of Matthew Brady's photographs of Lincoln.

  • It shows this decorative element right here on the side.

  • And so when you look at this, you see this decorative element

  • is not the same as this one.

  • So obviously, this chair isn't this chair.

  • Now, the interesting thing is the chair

  • that's in this photo is one that Matthew Brady owned,

  • not one that Lincoln owned.

  • Had this been a match to this, it

  • would have been highly unlikely it was ever in the White House.

  • Now, I tried to pull up every interior either drawing

  • or photograph from the Lincoln period that I can find

  • and I didn't find this chair in any of them.

  • What I couldn't find is any photographic proof

  • or drawing proof.

  • As I read this, we don't have anything from Lincoln

  • or from the White House.

  • The time period is right on the chairs,

  • but there's not enough for me to say that these are ones that

  • were used in the White House.

  • - Thanks. - Sorry about that.

  • Thanks, man.

  • And thank you, and very interesting to see.

  • Thanks a lot. - Thank you.

  • Appreciate it.

  • MARK: You need to have something that actually shows

  • ownership by Abraham Lincoln.

  • It's not going to be easy.

  • But if he can do that, he's got a really wonderful piece.

  • MAN: Well, if I buy something off a customer,

  • I got to resell it.

  • When I resell it, it's got to be beyond a reasonable doubt what

  • I'm selling is what I'm selling.

  • It's just the way I do business.

  • But this point, I can't make you an offer.

  • So thanks for coming in, but I just can't do it.

  • Thanks for looking at it.

  • No problem.

  • JERRY: You expect these things.

  • Everything can't be what you want it to be.

  • But I believe I brought in enough evidence

  • here to prove that this chair is from the White House.

- Well, obviously, all we got here is a chair.

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典當明星。林肯椅|歷史 (Pawn Stars: Abraham Lincoln Chair | History)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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