curious what this chair is worth....do not know alot about it but is old but in very good condition and the craftmanship seems very detailed. any info would be appreciated.
I received this box from my great grandmother, I believe it is very old. She was 98 when she passed away in 1986 and I was told it belonged to her mother. It is like a clear milk glass, has bumps that are clear and milky coloredT. It is 5 x 3 in size and in very good shape. I would love to know the year it is and the value. I would never sell it due to it belongs in the family. I will pass it down to my grand daughter when she is old enough to tressure it as I have. I remember being a little girl and always asking my great grandmother to see it with all her jewelry she had in it.
Thanks for any information you can find on this box
please email me any information possible on this item at: [email protected]
I have 3 lamp tables that are stamped on the back. I cannot find a manafacture listed anywhere. They were my Grandmothers so I know they are old. I am 61. The numbers on the back of the two larger ones with pullout drawers is 500-23. The number on the back of the smaller one is 507-23. Someone told me that meant 1923. I have pictures of the numbers and the tables. Any help would be appreciated. I just need to know if they have any value. Thank you so much. The stamp on the smaller one is fading, so I sent the picture of the written one.
This is a miniture wood burning stove that salesmen would bring to homes for examples. My father seen it at a garage sale, I am just curious if it has any value.. It is missing two top burners only
This is a souvenir bookend from the opening of the Stevens hotel in Chicago, May 2, 1927. The Stevens hotel has some history behind it which I've read about. It is now a Hilton. I'm not sure what its made of, but interested in knowing the value. Thanks in advance.
" The hotel was developed by James W. Stevens, his son Ernest, and their family who ran the Illinois Life Insurance Company and owned the Hotel La Salle. The Stevens featured 3,000 guest rooms, cost approximately $30 million to construct (more than ten times the cost of Yankee Stadium only few years earlier), and boasted of a virtual "City Within a City". The Stevens housed its own bowling alley, barber shop, rooftop miniature golf course (the "High-Ho Club"), movie theater, ice cream shop, and drug store.[5] The first registered guest was Vice President Charles G. Dawes.[6]"