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  • Doyle, Nov. 5: The Director's copy of the first edition of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, inscribed by Beckett. $7,000 to $10,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: Don McLean's personal test pressing of American Pie before mass production, gifted in 1971. $8,000 to $12,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The important and extensive archive of original fashion photographs of model Dorothy Rice, 1945-58. $20,000 to $30,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: A Charles Adams theater advertisement. $8,000 to $12,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: A Small Patinated Bronze Bust of Marlene Dietrich. $800 to $1,200.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: Marlene Dietrich Studio Photograph. $100 to $200.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The very large and uncommon British Quad for Hitchcock's The Birds. $500 to $800.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: An Original Crystal "Sputnik" from the 1966 Met Opera Chandelier. $3,000 to $5,000.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The rare poster from the first American performances of Endgame, 1958. $1,000 to $1,500.
    Doyle, Nov. 5: The original Coconut Grove Playhouse poster for Waiting for Godot, possibly unique. $3,000 to $5,000.
  • Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
    Doyle
    Rare Books, Autographs & Maps
    November 25
  • Sotheby's
    Fine Books, Manuscripts & More
    Available for Immediate Purchase
    Sotheby’s: William Shakespeare. The Temple Shakespeare. Housed in Custom Bookcase. $6,365.
    Sotheby’s: Frederick Douglass. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Boston: Anti-Slavery Office, 1845. $14,000.
    Sotheby’s: Charles Dickens. A Christmas Carol. London: William Heinemann, 1915. $2,900.
    Sotheby’s: F. Scott Fitzgerald. First Edition Set, Including This Side of Paradise, The Great Gatsby, and others. Charles Scribner's Sons. 1920 – 1941. $24,180.
    Sotheby’s: Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], John Tenniel. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland First Edition. Macmillan & Co., 1866. $15,000.

Rare Book Monthly

Articles - April - 2025 Issue

Remembering William Frost Mobley 1944-2024

William Frost Mobley

William Frost Mobley

The history of collectible paper has been a story of false starts. Auction houses in the 19th century waxed and waned. How to describe and organize records were constantly a matter of dispute. What matters and what fits were the subjects of discussion. In particular, what would be worthy of inclusion.  Books yes, pamphlets occasionally, broadsides if their timing and subjects were deemed collectible. Maps yes, but ephemera was waiting and waiting.

 

Then, during the mid-20th century, ephemera began to regularly appear in specialist dealer and auction catalogues.  It was then that the Ephemera Societies were formed.

 

This past year William Frost Mobley, early leader and inspiration for the burgeoning field, passed away. On 15 March, during the Ephemera Society’s annual meeting, is remembering his life and contributions.

 

Here is the official Ephemera Society account provided by Diane DeBlois and a personal perspective by Eric Caren’s In Memoriam who remembers him as teacher, advocate, and friend.

 

 

Remembering William Frost Mobley 1944-2024

(Issued in September 2024)

 

By Diane DeBlois

 

 

Bill’s phobias kept him out of caves, off airplanes, and away from microphones, but he was fearless when it came to ephemera. In the late 1960s, barely out of the Air Force, he launched a peripatetic career as an antiquarian book dealer and soon was specializing in what was then called Americana. He met his first wife - and great collaborator - Emily Davis at the 1st Cambridge [MA] Antiquarian Book Fair, Hallowe’en 1976. Bill then worked for and was mentored by two of the ‘greats’ in ephemera: Sam Murray of his hometown of Wilbraham MA, and Rocky Gardiner of Stamford CT - both of whom had joined the Ephemera Society (Great Britain) in 1975.

 

A sidebar provides the founding narrative of our Society, with Bill leading the thrust for a “top of the line” opening event. On his own behalf, he decided in 1980 to invest in a well-researched and nicely-printed catalog: Superlative Selection of American Nineteenth-century Historical and Advertising Broadsides, which he followed with two others: A Visual History of Trades and Professions, and An American Enterprise - A Fully Illustrated Catalog with Over 1250 Items [Trade Cards, Advertising, Ephemera] - all three have continue to be good references.

 

Bill and Emily filled every Society role, including handing all the printing and mailing of publications, the first in 1981. They also created roles: Bill was always on the lookout for reference works that touched on ephemera - and for many years he and Emily ran a Society bookstore through mail order and at fairs. Bill promoted partnering with major institutions for conferences apart from the annual fair - the first in 1991 at The Strong Museum in Rochester NY and subsequent ones at The American Antiquarian Society, Winterthur, Colonial Williamsburg, and The Clements Library.

 

From the beginning, Bill worked with Al Malpa at staging and sharing Society events. In 1982 Bill joined Brian Riba in the ephemera auction world; in 1994 he encouraged Russ Mascieri and Dave Cheadle in the founding of the Trade card Collector’s Association; and also in 1994 encouraged Barbara Rusch to found The Ephemera Society of Canada.

 

Bill styled himself a Chocolate Historian when writing the foreword to Linda K. Fuller’s 1994 Chocolate Fads, Folklore and Fantasies. His and Emily’s enthusiastic collecting of chocolate ephemera led to a presentation at Mohonk Mountain House which in turn led to Bill’s helping to organize Victorian-themed holidays there - with several Society members participating, including Phil Jones and John Grossman.

 

When Bill relocated to Colorado in 1996, his new wife and collaborator, Carol Teckenbrock, was an ephemera neophyte - but that soon changed. The most active paper collecting in the area was in postcards and the Mobleys began exhibiting at postcard fairs. Since 2016, Carol has been the show promoter for the Denver Postcard and Paper Show held three times a year and is currently the Chairman for the Rocky Mountain Book and Paper Fair. Bill and Carol established an on-line ephemera store, and their home became a center for good ephemera scouting and camaraderie. 

 

Bill’s ill health the last many years curtailed his travel, but not his telephone ephemera network. Bill wished for no memorial service; he asked that contributions be made in his name to the Ephemera Society of America. Bill’s own contribution will be the several volumes of beautifully-crafted scrapbooks containing all the first Society publications that Carol will bring these to Ephemera 45. Bill’s ashes are interred at Fort Logan National Cemetery; apart from dates, his tombstone reads, simply, “ephemerist”.

 

SIDEBAR:

The Ephemera Society of America was born with Ephemera USA 1, at the Harrison Inn, Southbury CT, in May 1980, the first event in World Ephemera Year, a concept created by The Ephemera Society in England founded by Maurice Rickards in 1975. The Society’s first North American initiative in 1977 had been called This Is Ephemera, which provided the title for an exhibition at the Bennington Museum VT and a book written by Rickards. Rickards’s Vermont connection was Calvin P. Otto, nominally in charge of World Ephemera Year events in North America (a World Ephemera Congress Ephemera 80 sponsored by Sotheby Parke Bernet & Co. was planned for September in London). William Frost and Emily Davis Mobley and Bill’s employer, the antiquarian bookman Sam Murray, contacted Otto in the spring of 1979 with the idea of holding a paper fair and conference to complement the London event. After discussing logistics with the show promoters of the Westchester Book & Paper Show at Iona College (who recommended the Harrison Inn and agreed to promote the event) the Mobleys drafted a formal proposal to the British society – which was accepted. The first planning meeting was held at a Sotheby’s on-site auction in New Hampshire in 1979, with Sally De Beaumont from The Ephemera Society, Otto, and the Mobleys. By Labor Day, the dates in May 1980 were set and the seeds of the American society sown. The first contact for participants was made at a conference of the American Historical Print Collectors Society. Elizabeth Baird introduced graphic designer Jack Golden to the Mobleys and he offered to design a poster for the ephemera event, which Otto agreed to have printed. At the Cambridge Antiquarian Book Fair in the Fall of 1979, Golden, Otto, and the Mobleys drafted proposals to launch the event as the first for an American branch of The Ephemera Society, not solely part of World Ephemera Year. The program for Ephemera USA 1 shows how ambitious were the hopes of this small group for the future of the American offshoot of The Ephemera Society. Among the conference speakers, private collectors were represented by Golden and Rickards; institutional collectors by Wendy Shadwell of the New-York Historical Society; and auction houses by David Margolis of Swann Galleries and two representatives of Sotheby Parke Bernet of London. The list of booth-holders at the 1980 Fair show how widely the Mobleys recruited for the best among antiquarian book, autograph, and antique dealers who were known to have already specialized in what used to be called Paper Americana. Most continued to be loyal supporters. Beth Baird, Kit Barry, Lynnette Bohling, Diane DeBlois & Robert Dalton Harris, Valerie Jackson-Harris, Alfred P.  Malpa, David Margolis & Jean Moss, Willis Monie, Stephen Resnick. Leonard & Jackie Balish, Jean Berg, Rocky & Avis Gardiner, Bob Lucas, Jan & Larry Malis, Barbara Meredith, Sam Murray, Stephen Paine, and John Simon.

 

      In 1984, Dick Friz, editor of the Ephemera News opened a profile of Bill with: “Every field of collecting has need for a visionary, a spokesman, cheerleader, an impresario all in one - who is capable of rallying a group of individuals to action. No matter that they sometimes appear to be at odds with one another, lacking contact with any world but their own.”

 

 

Bill Mobley:  In Memorium

Released today, March 7, 2025

 

By Eric Caren

 

BILL MOBLEY- A FOUNDING FATHER OF PAPER AMERICANA AND EPHEMERA!

 

William Frost Mobley a name which suggests formality and blue blood. Very misleading...William was a Bill to all who crossed his path. I am not sure when I first met Bill...must have been early 1980's. He was a gentleman yes; but never a snob. He had a quiet dignity which is as rare as anything that I have ever owned in The Caren Archive or The Eric C. Caren Collection. 

 

He started The Ephemera Society of America with other friends such as Cal Otto, Al Malpa, Kit Barry, etc.They all shared a true passion for historical  paper treasures. Bill worked tirelessly to further the movement first begun in the UK by Maurice Rickards.

 

I directed a gallery of Ephemera in London's posh Covent Garden Market when it opened in 1982. Earlier, I attended and often setup at the very earliest Paper shows in the 1970's. I am not even sure how we all knew to congregate at them. One would be at a Church, others at Iona College...At a guess; it was from small ads in antiques and book periodicals such as AB Bookman and Hobbies Magazine, handout flyers and the like.

 

Two common denominators were always in the air...Passion and Intellectual curiosity. None of us knew what anything was worth monetarily...there were no price guides (Well, I do still have my yellow soft cover guide to Paper Americana purchased around 1975), no internet, no Rare Book Hub.We chased what we loved and bought whatever we could afford. Most of us only regretted what we did not buy, even those of us who bought furiously.

 

Early paper shows had tables and varied, but always ugly table coverings...I remember having unnaturally green coverings uncomfortable to the touch as well as the eye...but at least they were flame retardant...I think.  and then much of the Paper was spread over tables in heaps, often only protected by the quality of the original paper used in manufacture. Common practice was to pencil price the material...Some even used ink UGH!

 

Along comes Bill Mobley and he quietly screams "this stuff deserves some respect." He was immaculate, but far from a dandy, and so were  his beloved trade cards, etc. They were neatly organized in binders. My first transaction with him went something like this..."Hey Bill, I got this group of trade cards...I know nothing about them. Are you interested in acquiring them?" He quickly but carefully reviewed them and could have made me very happy with a few 20's. Instead he offered me many hundreds, which I happily accepted. I will never forget his honesty and generosity. 

 

I remember when Bill and Brian Riba convinced Winter Auctions in CT. to let them create an Ephemera Department in their General Antique sales. These productions were primitive looking but I bought many treasures from them. Then they established Riba-Mobley Auctions also in CT. and hired the ever so professional and glamorous Dale Stulz to call the sales. I think I attended every single one. The catalog entries were well described by B and B and everything was photo illustrated. I still own the original Brady Studio Maquette of Lee and his Confederate Generals used to make the much scaled down cdv. I believe George Rinhart consigned that and much more great Photography. I remember that I paid something like $500 for it...Today it would probably bring 15 to $20,000, but it is nfs.

 

In any case, Bill not only started The Ephemera movement in the States; he also ran the first all Ephemera Auctions! After Brian Riba passed many moons ago...I and a partner picked up where they left off with HCA Auctions. Wes Cowan started at the very same time for the same purpose. We too had Dale Stulz conduct the sales, and they were in South Eastern Connecticut.

 

Back in the 70's, rare book dealers turned up their noses at paper...take a look at the exhibitors here. They changed their minds. Many of the records set at Christie's, Sotheby's, Swann, etc. are today just as likely to be Paper- Newspapers, Broadsides, Manuscripts, Trading Cards, Comic Books, Baseball cards, etc.

 

A big thanks to you Mr. William Frost Mobley. You were a pioneer and a first class gentleman!

 

Your Friend,

Eric

Eric C. Caren Collection & The Caren Archive

Director Emeritus- The Ephemera Society of America.

Rare Book Monthly

  • Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Presentation Copy of a Whitman "Holy Grail." Whitman, Walt. $10,000-$15,000.
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Endymion in Original Boards. Keats, John. $8,000-
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Association Copy of the Privately Printed Edition of The Tale of Peter Rabbit. Potter, Beatrix. $8,000-$12,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Christina Rossetti's Own Copy of Her First Book. Rossetti, Christina G. $8,000-$12,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: The Borden Copy of The Life of Merlin in an Elaborate Binding by Riviere. Heywood, Thomas, Translator. $6,000-$8,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Arion Press. Whitman, Walt, Leaves of Grass. $4,000-$6,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Call It Sleep in the First State Jacket. Roth, Henry. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Steinbeck's Best-Known Work. Steinbeck, John. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: A Fine Jewelled Binding Signed by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. Sangorski, Francis. $40,000-$60,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: The Complete Tales of Beatrix Potter: A Complete Set of First Editions. Potter, Beatrix. $2,000-$3,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Kelmscott Shelley. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. The Poetical Works. $3,000-$5,000
    Bonhams, Nov. 3-13: Inscribed by Martin Luther King Jr. King, Martin Luther, Jr. $3,000-$5,000
  • Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 75. The Second Printed Map of the North American Continent - Full Contemporary Color (1593) Est. $35,000 - $40,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 37. Schedel's Ancient World Map with Fantastic Humanoid Creatures (1493) Est. $16,000 - $18,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 104. Important Revolutionary War Plan of Battle of Quebec in Contemporary Color (1776) Est. $4,000 - $4,750
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 43. Mercator's Map of the North Pole - the First Printed Map Devoted to the Arctic (1606) Est. $2,750 - $3,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 237. Rare and Striking Bird's-Eye View of Lawrence, Kansas (1880) Est. $2,000 - $2,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 10. Rare Map from Atlas Maior with Representations of the Seasons in Contemporary Color (1662) Est. $14,000 - $17,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 374. Bunting's Map of Europe Depicted as the Queen of the World (1589) Est. $2,000 - $2,400
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 590. Willem Blaeu's Magnificent Carte-a-Figures Map of Asia (1634) Est. $2,750 - $3,500
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 647. The Earliest and Most Decorative Map of the East Coast of Africa (1596) Est. $3,000 - $3,750
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 710. Ruscelli's Complete, Third Edition Atlas with 65 Maps (1574) Est. $9,500 - $11,000
    Old World Auctions (Nov 12):
    Lot 696. Superb Hand-Colored Image of the Adoration of the Shepherds (1502) Est. $800 - $950
  • University Archives
    Rare Autographs, Manuscripts & Books
    Now through Nov. 19
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 308 - Bob Dylan Handwritten & Signed Lyrics to "Just Like a Woman" With Jeff Rosen & JSA Authentication
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 455 - Isaac Newton Admiration For Judaism & Moral Continuity With Christianity! 350+ Words in his Hand - Extraordinary Content!
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 219 - 371g Moon Meteorite, Incredible Find - Laâyoune 002
    University Archives
    Rare Autographs, Manuscripts & Books
    Now through Nov. 19
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 448 - Scarce Einstein AM on Unified Field Theory, 180+ Words & 11 Equations in His Hand! From His Published Article, "A Generalization of the Relativistic Theory of Gravitation"
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 159 - Woodrow Wilson Baseball Signed for WWI Red Cross Fundraiser, Ex. Forbes & PSA Authentic - Finest Known!
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 84 - Lee Harvey Oswald ALS to Brother, Trying Desperately to Get out of Russia! Highly Important
    University Archives
    Rare Autographs, Manuscripts & Books
    Now through Nov. 19
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 152 - George Washington Signed Discharge for MA Soldier Whose Regiment Was at Bunker Hill!
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 88 - Abraham Lincoln Fully Signed Military Appointment for Mexican War Vet & Respected Cavalryman
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 188 - Apollo XI Astronauts & Their Wives Signed Photo, Plus Crew Signed Cover, From Apollo XI Presidential Goodwill Tour Era, Pre-Cert Zarelli
    University Archives
    Rare Autographs, Manuscripts & Books
    Now through Nov. 19
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 265 - Martin Luther King, Jr. TLS Re: "Stride Toward Freedom" Film Rights To Literary Agent Marie Rodell
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 324 - John Lennon Signed Apple Records Check, PSA GEM MT 10! Possibly Finest Known
    University Archives, Nov. 19:
    Lot 79 - John & Jacqueline Kennedy Signed WH 1963 Christmas Gift Inscribed to Close Friend Joan Braden, PSA Authentic
  • Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands, 1st edition, 1844. £4,000 to £6,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Rashleigh (Philip). Specimens of British Minerals, 2 parts in 1, 1797 & 1802. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Murchison (Roderick Impey). The Silurian System, 1st edition, 1839. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs, 1st edition, 1842. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Darwin (Charles). Geological Observations on South America, 1st edition, 1846. £3,000 to £5,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Sowerby (James). The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain, 6 volumes, 1812-29. £2,000 to £3,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Emerson (William). Cyclomathesis: or an Easy Introduction to ... Mathematics, 10 vols. in 9, 1770. £1,500 to £2,000.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Robinson (Thomas). New observations on the Natural History of This World of Matter, 1696. £800 to £1,200.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Aquinas (Thomas). [Summa Theologica], Secunda Parte, Venice, 1496. £700 to £1,000.
    Dominic Winter
    Printed Books & Maps, Geology & Charles Darwin
    5th November, 2025
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Parfit (Cliff). Tesuki Washi. Handmade Papers of Japan, 1981-1988. £400 to £600.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Herbert (Thomas). A Relation of some yeares Travaile... Into Afrique and the greater Asia, 1634. £800 to £1,200.
    Dominic Winter, Nov. 5: Lindbergh (Charles A.). The Spirit of St. Louis, 1955, signed. £200 to £300.
  • Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 93: Autograph album containing 29 autograph letters signed by each president from Washington to Coolidge, 1785-1945.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 166: Franz Schubert, Autograph Musical Manuscript, fragment from Die Taucher, 1813.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 111: Thomas Jefferson, holograph plat drawing: map of field near Monticello, 1790s.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 208: George Sand, Autograph Manuscript Signed, draft of her one-act play, Francia, ca. 1872.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 218: Walt Whitman, Manuscript Signed, draft of three complete poems from Leaves of Grass, 1891.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 8: James Dean, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, still from Giant, 1955.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 20: John Lennon, Typescript Signed, interview discussing Paul, Linda, and Yoko, 1971.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 215: Mark Twain, engraved portrait Signed, "Mark Twain / SL. Clemens," 1890s.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 81: Vaslav Nijinsky, reproduction of an artwork by Léon Bakst Inscribed and Signed, 1916.
    Swann
    Autographs
    November 6, 2025
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 73: Malcolm X, The Harvard Crimson Signed and Inscribed: his street address and phone number, 1961.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 11: Lou Gehrig, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, ca. 1939.
    Swann, Nov. 6: Lot 153: George Gershwin, Photograph Signed and Inscribed, portrait by Renato Toppo.

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