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Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

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  • Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale



    The smell of horses and hay permeated the marble-floored galleries at Christie's in Manhattan last week as potential bidders previewed items including the preserved remains of movie cowboy Roy Rogers' famous horse Trigger.

    The auction house is selling items from the now-closed Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum in Branson, Mo., Wednesday and Thursday.

    Unlike the fine furniture, paintings and jewelry that Christie's is famous for, the centerpiece of this auction is a stuffed and mounted horse rearing on its hind legs. It also will feature another type of horsepower - Rogers' 1964 Bonneville convertible adorned with collectible silver dollars, its door handles and gear shift replaced by silver-plated pistols.

    The car is expected to draw $100,000 to $150,000. Trigger is expected to fetch $100,000 to $200,000.

    Other items for sale include Rogers' and Evans' performance outfits; the preserved remains of Rogers' dog, Bullet; about 60 pairs of cowboy boots; the Rogers' family dining table; and the Jeep "Nellybelle" from the Roy Rogers TV show.

    Michel Bettigole, 70, a prospective buyer who attended the preview, called Rogers one of his heroes and said he grew up watching him chase down bandits on the big screen.

    "But there was never any violence," he said. "He always shot the gun out of the bad guy's hand. It was good morals."

    Hundreds of items will be offered for sale, many of them with estimated prices in the low hundreds. Hand-drawn music for the theme song "Happy Trails" has a pre-sale estimate of $300 to $500. So does a grouping of two of Rogers' guitars.

    Cathy Elkies, Christie's director of iconic collections, said the estimates are based on the intrinsic values of the items, but prices could go much higher.

    Christie's has been overwhelmed with calls from everyone from museum representatives to Roy Rogers fans who wanted a piece of the King of the Cowboys, said Linda Kohn-Sherwood, who is helping oversee the sale.

    http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cg...DDEM1EC395.DTL






  • #2
    Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

    Originally posted by don View Post
    [CENTER]

    [LEFT]The smell of horses and hay permeated the marble-floored galleries at Christie's in Manhattan last week as potential bidders previewed items including the preserved remains of movie cowboy Roy Rogers' famous horse Trigger.

    The auction house is selling items from the now-closed Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum in Branson, Mo., Wednesday and Thursday.

    ...
    Why bother preserving anything of the past, when it can be sold off in pieces to the highest bidder. Ah, the new American way [we'll be living with the legacy of FIRE economy attitudes for a generation or two I imagine]...

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    • #3
      Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
      Why bother preserving anything of the past, when it can be sold off in pieces to the highest bidder. Ah, the new American way [we'll be living with the legacy of FIRE economy attitudes for a generation or two I imagine]...
      Till We Meet Again.....

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      • #4
        Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

        Stuffed horses. That's a top in something, just can't quite put my finger on what.

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        • #5
          Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

          I just saw the latest toy story film. The main character in the film is a toy cowboy, and I was thinking that it was a little anachronistic. When I was growing up there where no cowboy films in the movie theaters, no cowboy shows on the tube ( except reruns of gunsmoke from years ago). I didn't have any cowboy theme toys and I didn't know anybody that did. Did you? As they point out in the article, the people that want to bid on this stuff are in their 70s. I am glad all that stuff will find a good home. The museum closed because their clientele got old and died. Don't read too much into this.

          If you want a moral or take home lesson, it might be something like: "Roy Rogers was a better role model than... what? do we even have modern heroes? Possibly the old spice guy?

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          • #6
            Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

            I had the good fortune of meeting Roy Rogers when I was 10 years old. He shook my hand. I didn't wash my hands for a week! But buying poor old Trigger? Creepy...

            Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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            • #7
              Re: Depression Triggers Happy Trails Sale

              So they have Trigger and Bullet, but no Stuffed Roy Rogers for sale? I want the complete set!

              "When my time comes, just skin me and put me up there on Trigger, just as though nothing had ever changed."

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