[AT] Cold snap

Tyler Juranek tylerpolkaman at gmail.com
Thu Jan 18 08:28:07 PST 2018


Hi,
 I agree with John and Henry. Awhile back, a family of a man that
lived not to far from my grandfather, donated his tractor collection
to a historic society after his death. Not only did they donate the
tractors, but they also donated some extra parts, parts tractors, etc
to help the society maintain what they got.
 Well, a few months later, the historic group had an auction, selling
all of the things that they didn't want out of the estate.
 So if you can find a collector, I would go that route. And those
sears tractors, those are kind of rare, or at least in the midwest
they are.
 Just my $0.02.
 Take Care,
 Tyler

On 1/18/18, John Hall <jtchall at nc.rr.com> wrote:
> I agree about checking with museums. Unless it is a super valuable or
> rare piece, they probably aren't going to financially be able to
> preserve it. If money is no object, give to a collector that has
> demonstrated resources and ability to preserving it. If not interested
> in giving to a collector, set your price high enough to deter scrappers
> and those wanting"yard art", but low enough that a collector will buy it
> at such a value he can financially afford to preserve and restore it. I
> view old iron purchases just like anything else I had to buy--If i had
> to pay for it, you can believe I'm going to take care of it.
>
> John Hall
>
>
>
> On 1/18/2018 7:35 AM, Henry Miller wrote:
>> Don't donate to museums without first verifying they will care for it.
>> Most museums lack funds and have rooms for of things wasting away. They
>> often legally cannot sell them (other than to a different museum) and so
>> they end up waiting until time destroys things enough that they can junk
>> it. In the mean time nobody gets to enjoy that part of history as it
>> doesn't go on exhibit.
>>
>> If you find the right museum they will be excited to get it in exhibit and
>> care for it so all is well. Only that one piece though. If you give them
>> everything it sits in the back room un cared for.
>>
>> In short letting a private collector have your things for cheap on the
>> condition that they care for them and take them to shows is probably the
>> best way to get them shown to the public.
>>
>> I collect player pianos where the supply far exceeds demand. We have seen
>> some rare instruments worth saving destroyed because it was donated to a
>> museum that didn't care about it. Cars and tractors tend to be more
>> valuable so you have a better chance of them being cared for but only if
>> you check.
>>
>> Something to think about. There is no one right answer for everything.
>>
>
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