GUEST: This is a book about the war between the United States and Mexico. I bought the book because I love history, and it has beautiful pictures in it. I actually knew about the prints in the book, and I had bought two of these prints from a print shop in Dallas many years ago. And then when I saw the book, then I thought, "Oh, good. Now I'll have 12 more prints, and I can make a nice wall hanging." And then after I saw how exquisite the pictures were and the beautiful text, I simply couldn't butcher the book. I've had it for at least 15 years. I bought the book from an estate. The dealer had a particular price on it, and he and I negotiated a price, and he was a very nice man. He let me pay off in time. And Christmas came one year, and my husband said, "You know, I don't have a present for you for Christmas." And I said, "Oh, I know what you can do. You can go pay off my debt."
APPRAISER: The balance?
GUEST: The balance. That's how I got the book.
APPRAISER: So you... So you got debt-free for Christmas.
GUEST: Absolutely, absolutely.
APPRAISER: Can I ask how much you paid?
GUEST: $4,000.
APPRAISER: $4,000. Well, the book, as you know, is entitled, "The War Between the United States and Mexico, Illustrated." It's by George Wilkins Kendall, who was really the first great American wartime correspondent.
GUEST: Oh.
APPRAISER: He went to war alongside with the soldiers. He was out there taking notes and corresponding back to his newspaper. And it was very important to him that not only were the words accurate, but so, too, were the illustrations.
GUEST: Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER: And you were right, the illustrations in this book are magnificent. Carl Nebel was the artist.
GUEST: Right.
APPRAISER: He also accompanied Kendall along on the journeys and the battles, and did his sketches on site. They're lithographed plates. The plates were lithographed in Paris. And Paris had the greatest lithography in the world at the time. They're hand-colored, and you can see, all these details are picked up with shines, and gum arabic was used to heighten some of the parts of the illustrations for drama.
GUEST: This is my favorite picture of all.
APPRAISER: Your favorite one.
GUEST: Yes.
APPRAISER: General Scott's entrance into Mexico. The end of the war, basically. And here's Scott coming in. The plates were lithographed by the great lithographer Bayot. Between the combination of the great artist, the great text that Kendall wrote, and just the beauty of the execution of the entire book, it is a magnificent creation. Even here he says, Kendall, at the end of his preface, he says, "No country can claim that its battles have been illustrated in a richer, more faithful, or more costly style of lithography." The market, since you bought this, has made some incredible jumps, especially when it comes to color-plate books, particularly with, with relationship to American history. A copy of the book in roughly the same condition was sold at auction for $35,000.
GUEST: Really!
APPRAISER: Yes.
GUEST: I am astonished.
APPRAISER: Insurance would be $45,000 or $50,000. You want to keep it in the way it is, as it's been kept, but it...
GUEST: I must say, I'm reeling from this estimate.
APPRAISER: Spectacular.
GUEST: I am overwhelmed, thank you so much. I'm astonished.