GUEST: These were letters that my father received. He was the general chairman of the Truman Library auction that was held in the early '50s, and the correspondence that my father received from Truman. A picture of my mother and father, Harry Truman and Bess.
APPRAISER: With a shovel?
GUEST: A shovel, when he was presented with a gold-plated shovel for the ground-breaking ceremony. And this is a picture of the dignitaries at the ground-breaking ceremony. It was taken at the Slover Park shelter house, which is on the grounds of the Truman Library.
APPRAISER: That looks like a family snapshot. That doesn't look like something that would be recorded really anywhere else.
GUEST: I doubt it.
APPRAISER: The Truman Library opened after the Presidential Libraries Act of 1955 was passed. How did your father get involved with that?
GUEST: Well, they had a civic project. 16 different organizations went together, and my father was a general chairman of the auction event.
APPRAISER: And the letters are very heartfelt and appreciative of all his work and services because to build this library, they got donations from, I think, 17,000 different private individuals and groups and institutions that donated to put together a presidential library. And the reason for the library is to keep his papers for research and scholarship down the road. Independence is where he's known to be from, Truman. How far away is Independence?
GUEST: It's about ten miles to the east of Kansas City.
APPRAISER: Did you grow up in Independence?
GUEST: I grew up in the Truman neighborhood. As a young child, I saw Truman with the Secret Service.
APPRAISER: One thing here which was very amusing, these are wonderful letters and we know that they're to your dad, they're personal, which is great. This one is very touching, though. This one is from you, right?
GUEST: I was going to the National Boy Scout Jamboree, and we were told to bring things to trade. In my childhood innocence, I thought a Truman autograph would be the best thing around. And I had some other postcards signed, I took them to the Jamboree, and none of the Boy Scouts were interested in Truman's autograph, so I ended up bringing them home.
APPRAISER: So that's why you have it-- you couldn't swap it. And it's funny because you were asking him to buy... you were offering to buy his signature, and he writes back, "Here is your autograph. Make a good trade." And you didn't make a good trade.
GUEST: I sure didn't.
APPRAISER: I'm glad you didn't because now it's here as part of this archive. It's a great record, you've got the great letters, and then this is his memoirs inscribed to your father, which is very nice as well. So altogether, I would say insurance value, you'd be looking at about $8,000.
GUEST: Oh, my gosh.
APPRAISER: Yeah, about $8,000. The letters, because of their connection, it was a thank you for something to do with his life and the posterity of his presidency, so that's critical.
GUEST: It's amazing.