ANTIQUES ROADSHOW'S Season 29 tour is underway! See where we're going
Celebrate America’s hidden treasures from all 50 states in part 1 of this two-hour special, with finds such as a Thomas Hart Benton oil on tin, a Kentucky sugar chest, and a 1960 inscribed "To Kill A Mockingbird.” Which is valued at $125,000?
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Travel across America—and back in time—with items from all 50 states!
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A bar mitzvah gift that survived the Holocaust provides a chance to reflect on the "Night of Broken Glass" — November 9, 1938.
Margaret Keane is known for her iconic "Big Eyes" paintings. When they first emerged on the market in the late 1950s, she let her then-husband take credit for her work. But in the mid-1980s Keane proved her artistry in a courtroom. She still paints, and her story was made into a 2014 movie, Big Eyes, directed by Tim Burton.
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW visited the Japanese American Museum of San Jose to explore the beautiful and poignant art work of Japanese and Japanese Americans held at camps around the United States during World War II.
Learn more about this traumatic upheaval in the history of modern China.
Why was this Haddon Sundblom oil painting cut from its original canvas and repainted? Find out more in a letter from Coca-Cola!
At the June 2015 ROADSHOW in Tucson, [Douglas Deihl](http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/roadshow/appraisers/douglas-deihl), of Boston’s Skinner Auctioneers, estimated a Charles Loloma ring, bracelet, and limited-edition print would bring between $25,200 and $32,600 at auction. But how much do you know about this groundbreaking Native artist?
This article is republished here courtesy of the *ANTIQUES ROADSHOW Insider* magazine, where it originally ran in the March 2014 issue.
In 2005, this carved eagle plaque was appraised for roughly $40,000. By 2006 its value had soared to well over $100,000! And today, it's descended to a much lower altitude again. Folk Art expert Allan Katz updates us on the wild fluctuations in the Bellamy Eagle market.
Find out how the rescued baby Don — now all grown-up! — was reunited with the descendants of his rescuer, the recipient of the 1931 Carnegie Hero Medal featured on ROADSHOW!
Learn more about the man who purchased thousands of pieces of George Ohr pottery in the 1960s, and was instrumental in developing a market for the "Mad Potter's" work.
More information about the laws and regulations that govern the owning and trading of artifacts derived from animals.
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Funding for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is provided by Ancestry and American Cruise Lines. Additional funding is provided by public television viewers.
ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is a trademark of the BBC and is produced for PBS by GBH under license from BBC, Worldwide. PBS is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.
A weekly collection of previews, videos, articles, interviews, and more!