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News / Nation & World

Key JFK memorabilia fails to sell at auction

An auction of some of the most iconic items associated with the Kennedy White House fell well short of the pre-sale hype

By WILLIAM J. KOLE, Associated Press
Published: August 5, 2018, 10:27pm
2 Photos
FILE - In this Oct. 6, 1961, file photo, President John F. Kennedy, left, sits in his rocker in the White House in Washington, as he talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko about the Berlin situation. Beginning Friday, Aug. 3, 2018, Eldred’s auction gallery in East Dennis, Mass., on Cape Cod, is auctioning items associated with the late president, including a rocking chair that Kennedy used in the White House.
FILE - In this Oct. 6, 1961, file photo, President John F. Kennedy, left, sits in his rocker in the White House in Washington, as he talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko about the Berlin situation. Beginning Friday, Aug. 3, 2018, Eldred’s auction gallery in East Dennis, Mass., on Cape Cod, is auctioning items associated with the late president, including a rocking chair that Kennedy used in the White House. (AP Photo/Bob Schutz, File) Photo Gallery

BOSTON — Is JFK losing his star power?

It’s probably too early to tell, but 55 years after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, an auction of some of the most iconic items associated with the Kennedy White House fell well short of the pre-sale hype.

A rocking chair JFK used to meet with world leaders in the Oval Office sold for $50,000, and a collection of pens he used to establish the Peace Corps and sign a landmark nuclear treaty sold for $60,000 at Friday’s auction on Cape Cod, not far from the Kennedy compound in Hyannis, Mass.

But a number of other intriguing items didn’t sell, including Kennedy’s last pencil doodles before his assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, and a tie clip in the shape of the PT-109 torpedo boat Kennedy commanded during World War II.

Other items that didn’t get the minimum bid included a charcoal drawing done as a study for the slain president’s official White House portrait; handwritten notes he jotted about Vietnam around 1953; his letter opener and crystal ashtray; and his personal stereo and Jackie Gleason records.

“About half of it sold,” Josh Eldred, president of Eldred’s auction gallery in East Dennis, told The Associated Press. Buyers’ identities were not disclosed.

Even though the auction is over, buyers can still make offers, he said, adding that he’s confident the best of the memorabilia eventually will sell.

JFK’s worn, upholstered oak rocking chair had been expected to sell for up to $70,000. JFK often was photographed sitting in it while meeting with world leaders. The former president’s doctors urged him to use rockers to ease his chronic back pain.

The pens that sold were used not only to sign the Peace Corps into existence but the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty — an accord that helped steer the planet away from nuclear warfare a year after the Cuban Missile Crisis brought the U.S. and the Soviet Union to the brink.

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