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Pre-Robin Tecs + Tec 38 and 39

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What's the full story behind the crippen books? Anyone?

 

http://comics.ha.com/common/newsletter.php?id=1714

 

A spectacular collection of over 11,000 Golden Age comic books from a wide variety of genres has been discovered in the garage of a 19th century house just outside New York City. The original-owner comic collection has the greatest range and depth of any such collection to have been discovered during the past three decades. Now the entire collection is headed to the auction block, to be offered to the comic-collecting public with no reserves.

 

These comics, the great majority of them unread, were bought off the newsstand by a previously unknown collector named Davis Crippen. He started at age eight, but his collection really picked up steam a year later, in 1939. Inspired by a family friend's collection of Big Little Books, Crippen decided that from then on he would buy and keep every single new comic book as it came out.

 

He followed through on his plan. At first using money from his paper route and allowance, and later shipping comic books back from college at the University of Michigan, Davis continued to buy comics until his marriage a decade and a half later. He kept the books in the cool, dry, and very large basement of his family's Washington, D.C. home.

 

While Mr. Crippen has not been identified until now, a small part of his collection has already achieved notoriety among savvy collectors, apparently without his knowledge. When these books entered the marketplace in the early 1990s, they came to be known as "D Copies" because many had a handwritten "D" on the cover. They were also distinguished by a handwritten code on the top of the first page: several digits followed by several letters and then several more digits. The precise meaning of the code remains a mystery. Another mystery is how those comic books made their way into the marketplace.

 

After Mr. Crippen's death last year, his younger son catalogued the collection, which his father had boxed up and stored in the garage and basement of his New York home after his own parents' house was sold in the 1970s. The family then contacted Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries about selling the collection.

 

Mr. Crippen's heirs were stunned when Lon Allen, Director of Sales for Heritage's Comic Division, recognized the handwriting of the codes and realized he had discovered the source of the "D Copy" books. Allen considers the "D Copy" comics that had already attracted eager collectors to be just the tip of a vast iceberg. "It wasn't known they were part of a much larger collection, certainly not one of this magnitude," he said. "When you examine some of the other famous pedigrees you would have to rank this among the best. The date range of 1938 to 1954 gives it a far larger time span than the Tom Reilly/San Francisco or Lamont Larson collections, which were limited to the 1930s and early 1940s. Also, many of the other famous pedigrees focused only on #1 issues or certain specialized genres or publishers. Not so with Mr. Crippen, who bought absolutely everything."

 

"Comic collectors had wondered if there were any great Golden Age collections left to be discovered, and many doubted that was the case," Allen continued. "Well, this is essentially the Golden Age collector's dream come true -- 11,000 comic books, almost all in high grade, all 'original-owner,' that is to say, bought by the same person at the time of publication. And here's something we do not say lightly: the depth and breadth of the collection is second only to the Edgar Church/Mile High collection, the most famous hoard in all of comics." The Mile High collection made history when it was discovered during the 1970s.

 

"Previous pedigrees - even the Edgar Church books - were usually disbursed largely by private sale to a select few," Allen said. "At the very least, one or more dealers got to select the cream of the crop before the collecting public at large had a shot at them. Not so here - every comic consigned by the Crippen heirs will be put up for auction, giving collectors across America and around the world an equal chance at every book in the collection."

 

"It's already obvious that hundreds if not thousands of these comics will stand as the best known copy before all is said and done," added Ed Jaster, Vice President of Heritage Auction Galleries. "We can say without fear of contradiction that every Golden Age collector will find something he or she wants here," Jaster added, "especially as the entire collection is being offered without reserves. While all eyes are on the superhero books, and Mr. Crippen certainly collected a lot of them, there will be sports, Western, and romance books that all but the most dedicated collectors will not have seen before. Not to mention crime comics, promotional giveaways, Christian comics, war comics, funny animal books, teen humor, science fiction, TV and movie adaptations? if you've given up on ever being able to complete some of these runs in high grade, think again. The next few months will be a great time to be a Golden Age collector."

 

 

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how many crippen graded books are there Rick? Is this an appropriate question? :shy:
I was underbidder for the crippin 31 ad 35 a few years ago, and in hindsight, I was a for not going after them stronger...but at the time, I already had copies (multiple of each) so I wasn't thinking straight....
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Any idea where they are now Rick? I am sure you can land quite a few crippens , from 11,000 to choose from it shouldn't be a problem. Or is it only ceratin titles that interest you?

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how many crippen graded books are there Rick? Is this an appropriate question? :shy:
I was underbidder for the crippin 31 ad 35 a few years ago, and in hindsight, I was a for not going after them stronger...but at the time, I already had copies (multiple of each) so I wasn't thinking straight....

 

 

Aaahhhh the dream to have a 31... and a 35

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Any idea where they are now Rick? I am sure you can land quite a few crippens , from 11,000 to choose from it shouldn't be a problem. Or is it only ceratin titles that interest you?
just the tecs
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I was offered $26k for the Crippen Tec 31, but didn't go on with the deal
you mean you were offered the crippen tec 31 for $26K... the way you have it worded implies you own it (shrug)

 

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I was offered $26k for the Crippen Tec 31, but didn't go on with the deal
you mean you were offered the crippen tec 31 for $26K... the way you have it worded implies you own it (shrug)

 

:preach: it brotha. That was a good price Brian...who owns it?

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I was offered $26k for the Crippen Tec 31, but didn't go on with the deal
you mean you were offered the crippen tec 31 for $26K... the way you have it worded implies you own it (shrug)

 

:preach: it brotha. That was a good price Brian...who owns it?

indeed, inquiring minds want to know lol
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I was offered $26k for the Crippen Tec 31, but didn't go on with the deal
you mean you were offered the crippen tec 31 for $26K... the way you have it worded implies you own it (shrug)

 

:preach: it brotha. That was a good price Brian...who owns it?

indeed, inquiring minds want to know lol

 

I don't know who owns it, but I did use the make an offer button in the heritage archives and i was counter-offered the $26k. Now it's gone. Not sure if someone else bought it or if the owner took it down. But no, it wasn't me who currently owns it... or maybe :insane:

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I was offered $26k for the Crippen Tec 31, but didn't go on with the deal
you mean you were offered the crippen tec 31 for $26K... the way you have it worded implies you own it (shrug)

 

:preach: it brotha. That was a good price Brian...who owns it?

indeed, inquiring minds want to know lol

 

I don't know who owns it, but I did use the make an offer button in the heritage archives and i was counter-offered the $26k. Now it's gone. Not sure if someone else bought it or if the owner took it down. But no, it wasn't me who currently owns it... or maybe :insane:

If I'm not mistaken, the 5.5 Crippen Tec 31 has a small tape pull near the bottom FC edge...
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Thanks for posting the history on this pedigree Monkeyman! I've got a Crippen "D" copy GA Tec waiting for me in the USPS tomorrow AM! :)

 

 

And Koko--you wouldn't happen to have an undercopy to your undercopy of Tec 39 would you?-)

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Thanks for posting the history on this pedigree Monkeyman! I've got a Crippen "D" copy GA Tec waiting for me in the USPS tomorrow AM! :)

 

 

And Koko--you wouldn't happen to have an undercopy to your undercopy of Tec 39 would you?-)

 

 

Man.... are Tecs the only thing people are looking for these days? Well that little history lesson of the Crippen collection was very interesting. Doesn't everyone here wish that they stumbled onto a collection like that just once in their lives?! oh well, we can always dream.

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Thanks for posting the history on this pedigree Monkeyman! I've got a Crippen "D" copy GA Tec waiting for me in the USPS tomorrow AM! :)

 

 

And Koko--you wouldn't happen to have an undercopy to your undercopy of Tec 39 would you?-)

 

Sorry - its the only one I didn't.

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Last comic left - open to offers:

 

Tec #34 CGC 5.5 COW pages US$ 4,500:

 

tec34c.jpg

 

 

Comic now sold per PM.

 

This thread i snow closed.

 

Thanks to all buyers and those who participated in the thread (thumbs u

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