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One Filing Cabinet Held 500 Years Of History
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 6-4-2007 | Nigel reynolds

Posted on 06/03/2007 8:18:10 PM PDT by blam

One filing cabinet held 500 years of history

By Nigel Reynolds, Arts Correspondent
Last Updated: 2:09am BST 04/06/2007

One of the greatest collections of historical letters ever amassed has been found in a laundry room.

A Winston Churchill letter is valued at £10,000

Susannah Morris was called in to examine the hoard after the death of the secretive collector and was astonished to be led not into a library or a safe room but to the basement.

In the laundry room, wedged between a washing machine and a tumble dryer, was a plain metal filing cabinet. Miss Morris, who works for the auction house Christie's, opened it and could not believe her eyes.

Inside was the most remarkable collection of letters she had seen outside a national institution: a love letter by Napoleon; a diplomatic note to the king of France in the hand of Elizabeth I; a letter of condolence by John Donne; a tragic account written in 1545 by John Calvin, the theologian of the Reformation, about the suicide of a friend; and a withering letter by Charlotte Brontë on male shortcomings.

As Miss Morris delved through files, where the papers were arranged by size rather than alphabet, date or subject, her eyes grew wider.

There was a letter by Beethoven, one by Albert Einstein, by Isaac Newton, Hemingway, Frederick the Great, Darwin, Voltaire, Lewis Carroll, Pushkin, Monet, Churchill, Gandhi, Defoe, Tchaikovsky and Dostoevsky.

Napoleon wrote his love letter to Josephine in 1795

By the time she had finished her first trawl she had counted almost 1,000 letters written by the great monarchs, scientists, authors, painters, philosophers and musicians from the 15th to the 20th century in almost every European language.

After months of research Miss Morris has valued the find, which is to be sold in separate lots at Christie's in London on July 3, at £2 million.

She said yesterday: "It was an extraordinary find in such an improbable place. It is a history in miniature of the last 500 years of western civilisation and is the most remarkable collection on the market for a generation or more."

The man who spent half a lifetime putting it together was Albin Schram, who died two years ago. The son of an Austrian industrialist, he was born in Prague 1926 and, after the annexation of Czechoslovakia, he was conscripted into the Wehrmacht in 1943.

He was soon wounded and captured by the Russians and thrown into a PoW camp in Konigsberg but escaped and made his way on foot through Germany to rejoin his family in Vienna. He worked at the ministry of justice there but later went into banking and moved to Lausanne in Switzerland where he spent the rest of his life.

It was in 1973 when the collecting bug took hold and he made his first purchase, buying a 1795 love letter from Napoleon to his future wife, Josephine, one of just three known to exist from the period when they were engaged. It is fiercely passionate - they had had a quarrel the night before. Christie's have estimated it at £30,000 to £50,000.

Much later Schram bought a letter from Josephine to her brother Eugene, written in 1807 during the build-up to her divorce from the emperor. It is a bitter commentary on her relationship with the Bonaparte family who detest her.

The most valuable item in the collection is Donne's letter of condolence in 1624 to Lady Kingsmill the day after the death of her husband. He says that man should not judge God's actions "although we could direct him to do them better".

Miss Morris said that Schram never showed his letters to others nor wrote a catalogue of them. Even his family barely knew of their existence.

She said: "He would buy at all the European auction houses. I remember him coming to Christie's sometime. He was a white-haired, gentlemanly figure. In the early days he bid under the name Henry. He was marked out by an extremely stubborn bidding style.

"Only two weeks before his death he was handing out the last of a series of wish-lists which contained not only well-known figures as Walt Whitman and, rather oddly, Richard Nixon, but a series of eastern European authors and historical figures whose obscurity would have had the most learned polymath running for his biographical dictionary - Jan Zizka, for example."

Zizka, it transpires, is a Czech national hero from the 15th century.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: churchill; godsgravesglyphs; history; johncalvin; napoleon
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To: afraidfortherepublic
> most of it is written in pencil which is really dim by now

I suggest you try scanning them and then using Photoshop or any other decent imaging program to bring up the text. If that doesn’t work you might try to find a professional conservator or perhaps a local library or university. If my memory serves, the pros use thermal imaging to get good recovery of the faded text. Good luck.

21 posted on 06/05/2007 9:42:34 PM PDT by ADemocratNoMore (Jeepers, Freepers, where'd 'ya get those sleepers?. Pj people, exposing old media's lies.)
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To: ADemocratNoMore; blam

Thanks for the tips.


22 posted on 06/06/2007 7:53:15 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: blam

Very cool. More of the treasure trove comes to the surface.


23 posted on 06/06/2007 8:00:38 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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Gods
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.
GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother, and Ernest_at_the_Beach
 

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24 posted on 05/04/2009 5:49:03 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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