字幕表 動画を再生する
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[banjo music playing]
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[gunshot]
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[train horn sounding]
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[coins jingling]
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RICK: OK, so what do we got here?
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I have a letter from John Quincy Adams.
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- John Quincy Adams, huh? - Yes.
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RICK: 1822-- he was Secretary of State then?
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Yes, and he was president in 1824.
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Well, he was elected in 2004, and then there
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was no inauguration till March because they didn't want
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to travel in the winter time.
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[laughter]
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I found it in a box of items that I got from my uncle
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when my uncle passed away.
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I'd like to get $6,000 for it.
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I would drop down to $5,000, but that would
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probably be the least I'd take.
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RICK: So what is this letter about?
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This letter actually pertains to a census that was taken.
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And they included 16- to 18-year-old undocumented
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immigrants who were here.
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And they had to go back and fix it to the proper census.
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So basically we have here John Quincy Adams being
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Secretary of State, sending a letter saying,
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you did the census wrong.
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Redo it. TED: Right.
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OK. Interesting.
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Yeah.
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A letter signed by the president--
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the content is so important. TED: Right.
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If you had a letter by Abraham Lincoln talking about freeing
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the slaves, that is worth a lot more
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than Abraham Lincoln complaining that his bathroom doesn't work.
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[laughs] Do you understand what I'm saying?
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Yeah. RICK: Yeah.
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The content does matter.
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So things like this are always scary to me
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because it was just common, common
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practice to have your secretary sign everything for you.
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You're a busy guy.
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Yeah.
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Or this was back in the 1800s.
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The president might have been drunk.
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[laughs] But the paper looks right.
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The ink looks right.
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Have you checked this out at all?
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I have.
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I've done some background of my own over the internet.
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I did match up his signatures and things like that.
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I'm assuming you want to sell it.
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Yes.
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I was looking for $6,000.
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This is actually great shape.
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You're lucky because this has obviously been under glass
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for a very, very long time.
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Do you mind if I call someone in?
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Yeah, no, if it's gonna help us.
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I'd like to make sure it's real too.
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All right.
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I'm gonna call him up.
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Hang out a few months.
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Maybe buy something. TED: OK.
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I've got some cool stuff.
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[laughs]
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There's a lot of history behind this guy.
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I mean, he's pretty much groomed to be
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the President of the United States at some point in time.
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This guy really stood out, you know.
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OK, so is it his signature?
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Did he write the letter?
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And what's it worth?
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And we'd would look at a few things.
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First thing I'm gonna do is look at the signature
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under magnification.
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I want to look at the ink.
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And I can see this is using a quill.
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This overlapping on here, especially right in this area,
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you know, we know this is live ink.
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And what I did bring along today are several examples.
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It's really flowing.
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It's a very beautiful signature.
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Here's one example.
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And we see some similarities tying in here.
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And what I want to do on this one especially
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is look at his last name.
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And I'm starting to see the same thing over and over again.
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TED: Because that's actually abbreviated.
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And this just makes sense where
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he would do an abbreviation of this as well.
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And everything matches up pretty well here.
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From everything I can tell, we're
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talking about a piece signed by the sixth President
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of the United States, which is kind of cool.
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All right, the letter itself, you have a lighter ink.
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You have a darker ink on here in two different pressures.
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In this case on here, and this is pretty simple,
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and it's something that, you know, I've studied a lot,
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this isn't his writing.
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Could have been written by his secretary.
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Back then they called it semi-proxy.
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And do you think that just because the differential
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between the--
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Well, I mean, there's several factors-- obviously, the ink.
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But also just the style of writing is not his.
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So what's it worth?
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If it was three years later, a handwritten letter by him
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could go for $5,000 to $10,000 as a sitting president.
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But this is Secretary of State.
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It's a little less significant.
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Stuff like this typically runs at about $1,600.
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They don't go for much more than that.
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Thanks, man. STEVE GRAD: Thanks.
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Good to see you. TED: Thank you.
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STEVE GRAD: Good luck.
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Thanks.
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John Quincy Adams is a collectible autograph,
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you know, mostly just for presidential collectors.
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I mean, is he desirable?
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Yeah, to an extent, but not as much as like Abraham
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Lincoln or George Washington.
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OK, so, if it was written in his hand,
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we'd have a whole lot of money.
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But we don't.
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TED: I think the whole thing was written by him.
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All right.
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Just that there's a discrepancy in the signature
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and the letter itself, which is the way he signed things.
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OK, well, you know what?
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You're always free to have it checked out or somebody else.
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TED: All right.
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RICK: I could give you like $1,000.
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Yeah, for that, I think I'm gonna go ahead and keep it.
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I'll keep it and [inaudible] save it for my kids
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or do something else with it, so.
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RICK: OK.
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Sorry we couldn't make a deal, man.
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Thank you.
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It's not his handwriting?
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You got to be kidding me.
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I'm going to try and go ahead and legitimize it 100%
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and see if I get some more opinions on it.