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A bit ot but this is certainly a lot of coin

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  • richardshipprichardshipp Posts: 5,647 ✭✭✭
    This must be spam !!!!











    image
  • what will the ebay fees be?
    "Everyday above ground is a good day"

  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭
    I wonder if the deal will actually close? Frequently when an eBay auction reaches in to the $millions it ends up being punks just screwing around.

    Russ, NCNE
  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭


    << <i>what will the ebay fees be? >>



    At the current bid, $45,042.32.

    Russ, NCNE
  • cohocorpcohocorp Posts: 1,371 ✭✭
    3 million for a window is too steep for me. i spent my nut on the last piece of toast with the virgin mary or jesus christ on it. i forget which one it was and my dog ate it right away.


  • << <i>

    << <i>what will the ebay fees be? >>



    At the current bid, $45,042.32. >>



    I'd gladly pay 45k for 3 mil.
    image
  • RichieURichRichieURich Posts: 8,620 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>I wonder if the deal will actually close? Frequently when an eBay auction reaches in to the $millions it ends up being punks just screwing around.

    Russ, NCNE >>



    I'm guessing it will not actually happen. I don't think anyone is stupid enough to pay over $3 million for that. But, I've been wrong before.

    An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.

  • Wow...look at how many bids have been canceled.

    Why would they auction it on eBay?

  • mrpaseomrpaseo Posts: 4,753 ✭✭✭
    I would have bid on this but I can't get away from work to pick up the item... Oh well, I guess I'll have to save my 3 million bucks for something else...

    I wonder what would happen if I showed up with Monopoly money image

    Ray
  • Five minutes to go!
    Successful transactions with: DCarr, Meltdown, Notwilight, Loki, MMR, Musky1011, cohodk, claychaser, cheezhed, guitarwes, Hayden, USMoneyLover

    Proud recipient of two "You Suck" awards
  • commoncents05commoncents05 Posts: 10,099 ✭✭✭
    Someone with 6 positive feedbacks won the auction. I have my doubts....

    -Paul
    Many Quality coins for sale at http://www.CommonCentsRareCoins.com
  • Closed @ US $3,001,501.00 and there even was a late, last minute snipe.
    image


  • Wow...

    Do not see that every day, thanks for sharing...

    My Ebay Auctions

    Currently Listed: Nothing

    Take Care, Dave
  • commoncents05commoncents05 Posts: 10,099 ✭✭✭
    The bidder who won has 6 positive feeback points, and the last 2 things they bought were $35 markers. I highly doubt he's a millionaire.

    -Paul
    Many Quality coins for sale at http://www.CommonCentsRareCoins.com
  • RichieURichRichieURich Posts: 8,620 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>The bidder who won has 6 positive feeback points, and the last 2 things they bought were $35 markers. I highly doubt he's a millionaire.

    -Paul >>



    imageimage

    An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.

  • TennesseeDaveTennesseeDave Posts: 4,890 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The picture of the book depository shows a double window highlighted where the shots were fired from.There must be another window somewhere,and who knows for sure which window the shots were fired from?Some people have too much money.
    Trade $'s
  • BurksBurks Posts: 1,103
    Who wants that window?

    I'd rather have a patch of the grass that the REAL bullet was fired from.
    WTB: Eric Plunk cards, jersey (signed or unsigned), and autographs. Basically anything related to him

    Positive BST: WhiteThunder (x2), Ajaan, onefasttalon, mirabela, Wizard1, cucamongacoin, mccardguy1


    Negative BST: NONE!
  • SandhawkSandhawk Posts: 1,154 ✭✭✭


    I'd rather have a patch of the grass that the REAL bullet was fired from.


    A bloody skull fragment from JFK might be kinda cool as well !!






    imageimage



  • << <i>I'd rather have a patch of the grass that the REAL bullet was fired from.


    A bloody skull fragment from JFK might be kinda cool as well !! >>



    LOL that's a little sick.
    image
  • MyqqyMyqqy Posts: 9,777
    A bloody skull fragment from JFK might be kinda cool as well !!

    Dude, that's just wrong...
    My style is impetuous, my defense is impregnable !


  • << <i>

    << <i>I'd rather have a patch of the grass that the REAL bullet was fired from.


    A bloody skull fragment from JFK might be kinda cool as well !! >>



    LOL that's a little sick. >>



    OK kinda cool but how does it relate to coins.


  • << <i>

    << <i>I wonder if the deal will actually close? Frequently when an eBay auction reaches in to the $millions it ends up being punks just screwing around.

    Russ, NCNE >>



    I'm guessing it will not actually happen. I don't think anyone is stupid enough to pay over $3 million for that. But, I've been wrong before. >>



    Rich--I think the $3 million includes the School Book depository building.
    Curmudgeon in waiting!
  • and to think the winning bidder's last purchase was a 10 pack of magic markers
  • notwilightnotwilight Posts: 12,864 ✭✭✭
    did you guys notice what the seller has sold (and bought) before? Where did he get is? Is he a janitor or carpenter working on the building?

  • pb2ypb2y Posts: 1,461
    You guys are comical--how do you find this crap
    image

  • "Stained Glass"

    The man on the phone speaks in conspiratorial tones. His
    name is Martin Barkley, a 40-something divorced father of
    two who has devoted so much of his life to a single purpose --
    proving that Lee Harvey Oswald did not kill John Kennedy
    from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository on
    November 22, 1963.
    His research qualifications amount to having worked security for
    several large companies and spent time in Army intelligence. His
    personal link to the assassination was that his uncle was the
    longest-serving Dallas police officer when Kennedy was shot
    -- and, of course, he whispered something conspiratorial at
    Thanksgiving dinner days after the assassination.
    Barkley is a true believer, and he talks in elliptical phrases and
    vague pronouncements. On this day, he says he wants to share
    his theory that Dallas' powers-that-be are perverting the information
    presented in the Sixth Floor Museum, Oswald's alleged sniper's
    perch -- and this city's biggest tourist attraction. Barkley argues that
    those in charge of the museum are toadies for the Warren Commission.
    "The way to control an issue is to manage information on both sides so
    nothing gets out of control," he says, espousing a typically muddy slogan.
    He says he will prove this all with a guided tour of
    the Sixth Floor, where he used to work as a security guard.
    Barkley was a seasonal hire two years ago and was laid off --
    ostensibly when tourist traffic slowed down, he explains. But
    he's convinced that he was, in fact, terminated because he
    answered visitors' probing conspiracy questions too honestly,
    too carefully, too knowledgeably. Of course, he can't prove it.
    Barkley insists we meet late on a Sunday, when we would
    arouse the least amount of suspicion.
    When he arrives that afternoon, he wears an overcoat over his
    tall frame and a fedora that doesn't obscure piercing blue eyes.
    Still, the disguise doesn't work: Two minutes after we step
    inside the building, security guards surround him and want to
    know why he's there.
    "See what I mean," he whispers, as the guards escort us up in
    the elevator.
    He reels off an enormous list of ways the museum subtly
    controls the mind of the visitor. He is suspicious of a sign that
    directs visitors to begin the tour with the panels and videos
    highlighting Kennedy's early years; Barkley believes the "flow"
    of the exhibit -- which winds through Kennedy's all-too-brief
    presidency, his fateful visit to Texas, then the assassination -- is
    intentionally misleading and exhausting.
    "By the time the visitor gets to the end," Barkley insists, "he's
    too tired to read about conspiracies."
    Barkley's rant is a fairly predictable and obvious one. Indeed,
    place a museum on the sixth floor of the old School Book
    Depository, and you're pretty much admitting you think Lee
    Harvey Oswald acted alone. It's not like the county opened a
    Grassy Knoll Museum.
    Yet Barkley is not all hushed whispers and vague hypotheses.
    Displayed halfway through the tour in the Sixth Floor Museum
    is one of the most famous windows in the world -- the perch
    from which Oswald allegedly killed Kennedy with a cheap
    Italian mail-order rifle. Behind a thick wall of Plexiglass, the
    window has been exhibited here since 1995, and since then,
    more than a million visitors have scrutinized it, studied it, even
    venerated its tragic place in history.
    The window, located in the southeast corner of the museum,
    sits only a few feet from where Oswald killed Kennedy --
    allegedly, of course. It bears the caption "The Original
    Window from the Sniper's Perch."
    But is it?
    Barkley believes the infamous perch that hangs in the museum
    is a fake...a fraud.
    He may be right.
    Just a cursory look at the window on display reveals that it
    differs significantly from pictures taken of the window moments
    after the assassination.
    For instance, the window on display has a thick smudge of
    paint and putty on a pane of glass at its top half. But there is no
    such smudge on any pictures of the original sniper's perch.
    Also, old photos of the window -- photos that are on display
    at the museum -- show markings on the green wooden sash
    along the bottom portion of the window. The window encased
    in the Plexiglass exhibit has no such markings.
    Of course, conspiracy theorists say they never believed it was
    the real window all along.
    So here's one more riddle for the theorists to solve: If this isn't
    the real window, and it likely isn't, then where is it -- and how
    did this impostor wind up enshrined in this museum? We're
    through the looking glass, as Kevin Costner's Jim Garrison
    drawled in JFK, where every answer spawns a dozen more
    questions.
    "There is just no end to this," says Robert Groden, a prominent
    local conspiracy theorist who served as a photo analyst on the
    1978 U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on
    Assassinations. "It's just mystery after mystery."
    For more than two decades, the window -- or what one man
    believed was the famous sniper's perch window -- hung like a
    trophy, or a deer's head, in the banquet room of one of the
    wealthiest men in Dallas.
    Col. D. Harold Byrd kept it in his University Park home as a
    souvenir, a tragic keepsake he ordered removed from the
    building on Elm and Houston streets that he owned and leased
    to the Texas School Book Depository. Byrd kept it there until
    his death in 1986, at which time it fell into the hands of his son
    Caruth -- who, the story goes, kept the window out of public
    view for almost a decade.
    Caruth Byrd wanted to keep the window buried, forgotten
    about. He rejected enormous financial offers from those who
    collect such morbid artifacts, and refused the requests from
    those who wanted to place the window in a Dallas museum
    commemorating the assassination -- fearing the museum would
    be an embarrassment to the city. He preferred to keep hidden
    this reminder of Dallas' shame...until one day, in 1994, he had a
    change of heart and turned the window over to the Sixth Floor
    Museum.
    On February 21, 1995 -- President's Day -- more than 100
    elected officials, members of the Dallas County Historical
    Foundation, and assassination eyewitnesses gathered at the
    Sixth Floor Museum for the window's dramatic unveiling.
    "I thought and thought about what to do with it," the garrulous,
    barrel-chested Byrd told the assembled crowd during the
    unveiling ceremonies. "I've had offers for a lot of money for it,
    but I decided the best thing to do was bring it home where it
    belongs."
    The window has remained on display here ever since, an
    authentic piece of history that offers its own special peek into a
    tragic day in this city's history.

    At least, that's what half a million visitors a year believe.
    There are those who doubt Byrd's tale -- those who have
    photographic evidence right in the museum that proves the
    window on display is not the real sniper's perch, those who
    have spent months studying the discrepancies.
    And there is at least one man who claims to own the window
    itself.
    First, there is Barkley and his band of conspiracy theorists,
    including James Bagby, another former security guard at the
    museum. After overhearing some museum visitors question the
    authenticity of the window last March, Bagby studied the
    window for himself. He first noticed that the one-inch thick,
    salmon-colored smudge of paint and putty on the display
    window isn't apparent on an old picture of the real window.
    The smudge, which is on what would have been the outside of
    the glass, matches the color of the wooden trim on the outside
    of the window. A note on the exhibit points out that the "paint
    on the exterior trim is original to the time of the assassination."
    After studying pictures of the real window taken the day of the
    assassination, Bagby also noticed the distinct markings on the
    wooden sash along the bottom of the window that do not
    appear on the window on exhibit.
    Bagby first brought these discrepancies to the attention of
    museum archivist Gary Mack eight months ago.
    "'What you've discovered is quite important,'" Bagby says
    Mack told him. "'But I wouldn't be telling anyone about this.'"
    Jeff West, executive director of the Sixth Floor, and Mack
    now admit they have questions about the authenticity of the
    window -- no, make that doubts.
    "We have concerns," West says. "It definitely bears scrutiny."
    "It's a corner window," Mack adds. "Whether it's the window
    where shots were fired, we're not sure."
    What makes all this speculation significantly more intriguing is
    that Conover Hunt, the museum consultant who helped put the
    Sixth Floor Museum together, knew from the beginning that
    there was someone else out there who claimed to own the real
    window.
    His name is Aubrey Mayhew, a music producer from Nashville
    who may be the one person who can repair this jagged puzzle
    -- or bust the whole thing into a million pieces.
    The tale of the sniper's perch is not only a whodunit, but a
    whogotit. And with any mystery, perhaps it's easier to begin at
    the beginning, during those moments just as the echo of gunfire
    began fading in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963, and
    Dallas police ran inside the brick building at the corner of Elm
    and Houston.
    They were directed there by witnesses who thought they saw
    what appeared to be the barrel of a rifle jutting out of a
    half-opened window on the sixth floor of the building, which
    housed the Texas School Book Depository, one of two
    textbook distribution sites for the state.
    On the cavernous sixth floor, filled with stacks of book-filled
    boxes, police said they found three shell casings in front of the
    open window in the southeastern-most corner of the building.
    They also claimed to find a rifle, which Oswald was said to
    have bought through mail order, stashed under boxes
    diagonally across from the window.
    Until the end of the 1960s, the Texas School Book Depository
    Company remained in the building, which was owned by Col.
    D. Harold Byrd. Byrd was an oil millionaire and husband of
    Mattie Caruth, whose family once owned most of the land from
    downtown Dallas to Park Lane. The Caruth family, after whom
    Caruth Haven Road is named, donated all the land for
    Southern Methodist University and leased the land for
    NorthPark Mall.
    Afraid that curiosity seekers would carve off pieces of the
    sniper's-nest window, Byrd instructed his employee, Buddy
    McCool, to remove the window six weeks after the
    assassination, according to interviews with McCool and Byrd
    filmed in the early 1970s.
    Whether McCool removed the right window is the question at
    the heart of this mystery.
    The location of the sixth-floor sniper's perch is among the most
    infamous points of interest in the whole world. Yet it's
    conceivable that six weeks after the assassination, Byrd's
    lackey could have been confused about its exact location.
    There is no one alive who can verify which window McCool
    took out that day.
    Byrd obviously took it on face value that he had the right one.
    He decorated the bottom half of the window with newspaper
    clippings of the assassination and postcard pictures of
    Kennedy, Dealey Plaza, and the book depository; then he had
    the whole thing framed.
    He hung it in the banquet room of his Vassar Street mansion --
    later bought by oilman T. Boone Pickens -- next to photos and
    mementos of his long, colorful career, which included
    co-founding the Civil Air Patrol, drilling numerous wildcat oil
    wells in East Texas, and funding the Antarctic explorations of
    his cousin, Admiral Richard E. Byrd, who named an Antarctic
    mountain range after the Texas colonel.
    Byrd held onto the former book depository building until 1970,
    when he auctioned it off to a Nashville music producer named
    Aubrey Mayhew. Mayhew was a Kennedy memorabilia
    collector who planned to turn the structure into a commercial
    museum commemorating Kennedy's life. Still reeling from the
    fallout of the assassination that branded Dallas as "The City of
    Hate" and placed the blame for Kennedy's murder on Dallas'
    hostile environment, local city fathers recoiled at the idea of a
    museum that would consecrate the town's darkest hour. They
    also found Mayhew's intention to profit off the tragedy distasteful.
    Mayhew tried several times to get city permits to start building
    his museum, but he was repeatedly turned down. A group
    called Dallas Onward, formed to protest turning the building
    into a national Kennedy landmark, helped thwart Mayhew's
    efforts.
    By 1973, Mayhew defaulted on his loan, and Byrd
    repurchased the building after the bank foreclosed on it. He
    immediately put it back up for sale, this time asking $1.2 million
    for it. At the time, he said, he hoped whoever purchased the
    site "would use the building in a way that would not be a slam
    on Dallas...that would not blame Dallas for having the right
    environment for causing Kennedy's death," according to a
    filmed interview with Byrd.
    The city passed an ordinance preventing the building from
    being torn down. Several city leaders, including real-estate
    developer Ray Nasher, were conducting their own campaign to
    create a private, nonprofit museum and monument to Kennedy
    on the site.
    In 1977, Dallas citizens voted to use bond money to purchase
    the building from Byrd. The first five floors were refurbished for
    Dallas County administrative offices.
    But little did anyone know that before Aubrey Mayhew
    vacated the premises, he hired two carpenters to remove two
    windows from the southeast corner of the sixth floor and
    replace them with windows from the north side of the building.
    He says he sneaked off with the sniper's-perch window -- "the
    ultimate piece of Kennedy memorabilia" -- while no one
    noticed.
    Or so he claims.
    If there is anyone to blame for this predicament, perhaps you
    should look no further than Conover Hunt.
    A museum consultant from Marshall, Hunt first got involved
    with converting the sixth floor into a museum in the early
    1980s. Hunt immediately noticed the sniper's-perch window
    was missing.
    The entire casement that contained the two windows on the
    southeast corner had been replaced with windows from the
    north side of the building. She wasn't sure she would ever get
    her hands on the real ones.
    Then, in 1987, two men contacted her, both claiming to have
    possession of the sniper's perch window. Caruth Byrd called
    Hunt and told her he had inherited the window from his father,
    who had died the previous year. Caruth said he stashed it
    behind some drawers in his house on a sprawling ranch in Van,
    just east of Canton. Hunt says she asked Byrd to send her
    proof that he had it, but he wasn't forthcoming.
    Still, Hunt says she was inclined to believe Caruth, because she
    knew several people, including Joe Dealey Sr., late publisher of
    The Dallas Morning News, who had seen the window
    hanging in Colonel Byrd's house.
    Caruth Byrd eventually allowed Hunt to see the window, which
    he moved to a vault in Inwood Village. But he refused to
    donate it or loan it to the museum. The Sixth Floor Museum
    was still two years away from opening, and Byrd, echoing
    concerns his father had uttered years earlier, was afraid the
    museum would be tacky and an embarrassment to the city.
    Not long after Byrd met with Hunt, Aubrey Mayhew sent Hunt
    a letter. He, too, said he had the window -- both windows, in
    fact -- from the sniper's perch, and he wanted $250,000 for
    them. Hunt says she asked Mayhew to send her a picture and
    measurements of the windows.
    "He never did," says the whiskey-voiced Hunt. "I was naturally
    cautious. If someone wants to sell it, the least they can do is
    send a picture and the exact measurements."
    Hunt explains that she never flew to Nashville to see Mayhew's
    windows because she couldn't justify the expense without first
    having some proof that Mayhew actually had the windows.
    In 1994, Caruth Byrd suddenly changed his mind about
    burying the past and let the museum know he was willing to
    loan out the window. Hunt retrieved it from Byrd's ranch and
    analyzed it. She says the paint color matched the other
    windows along the southern wall, and the shape led her to
    believe it was one of the two corner windows that were
    missing.
    "And the provenance -- the history of ownership -- was
    excellent," she says. She admits she did not compare Byrd's
    window with pictures of the original.
    Although the window on display touts it as "The Original
    Window from the Sniper's Perch," leading visitors to believe it
    was the window through which Oswald allegedly shot
    Kennedy, Hunt also admits that she was never certain of that.
    "There were two windows missing, so there was a 50-50 shot
    that this was the one through which the gunman fired."
    Now that questions are being raised about the window's
    authenticity, Hunt defends herself by claiming that both
    windows are historically significant -- even though there's a
    good chance the museum isn't advertising the truth.
    "Until you have both windows together and have them
    professionally examined, you won't have an answer," she
    insists. "The fact that people are studying the window,
    examining the evidence, is healthy. These things happen all the
    time in my business."
    It's now early November 1997, just weeks before the 34th
    anniversary of Kennedy's assassination, and Caruth Byrd has
    no idea the Sixth Floor Museum has any concerns about the
    window he loaned them.
    A Confederate flag and a flag of John Wayne fly over his
    150-acre ranch in Van, the Caruth Byrd Wildlife Compound.
    A large man with white hair and bulging blue eyes, Byrd divides
    his time between his private wild kingdom, where more than
    3,000 exotic and endangered animals roam, and his Hollywood
    home next to Gene Autry, where Byrd produces movies and
    TV specials.
    "Watch out for the kangaroo sh_t," he warns as we approach
    the front porch of his house, which resembles a huge
    dude-ranch lodge. He and the kangaroo, he explains, shared a
    morning doughnut on the porch.
    A self-professed mortician, veterinarian, gourmet cook, and
    "the best organ player in the world," Byrd is a hard man to
    characterize, at once grandiose and earthy. He describes
    himself as a man "who was born with a silver spoon up my
    ass," but who despises the phony airs of the Dallas rich. His
    main residence on his compound, where he lives alone, is
    covered with hundreds of pictures of him with such Hollywood
    notables as Burt Reynolds and Lee Majors.
    Among the photos lining the walls is a picture of him
    donating the window to the Sixth Floor Museum. Byrd
    launches into the story about how his father ordered an
    employee to remove it, and he rolls a videotaped interview with
    the worker that confirms his story.
    Byrd says he decided to loan the window to the Sixth Floor
    after he got a call from The Smithsonian Institute, asking him to
    donate it to the Washington museum. "I decided if it went
    anywhere, it should stay in Dallas," Byrd says of his decision.
    He has no doubts that his window is the real sniper's perch,
    and he is shocked to learn that the people running the Sixth
    Floor now have questions about its authenticity.
    The name Aubrey Mayhew makes Byrd bristle. "He's a nut
    who tried to buy the building from my dad," Byrd says. "If he
    says he has the window, then where in the hell is it? He can't
    produce one."
    Mayhew is the equivalent of the sniper's-perch second gunman,
    the man who may or may not hold the answer to the mystery of
    the missing window. But if he does possess the proof, making
    him produce it may be impossible.
    Mayhew is a bitter fellow who believes a cabal of powerful
    Dallasites conspired to take away from him the building that
    houses the Sixth Floor Museum. Mayhew claims he lost
    everything in pursuit of creating a Kennedy museum here -- his
    livelihood, his wife and two children -- and he blames Dallas
    for those losses.
    So it's not surprising that when finally reached in Nashville,
    Mayhew almost explodes when asked about the authenticity of
    the window on display in Dallas.
    "Of course it's not the real window!" he bellowed over the
    phone. "I've been telling you people this for 30 years. I'm really
    a low-profile, non-publicity guy. All I can tell you is that Mr.
    Caruth Byrd is an idiot, and his father is an idiot and a thief."
    Mayhew went on to insist that he still has the real window in
    storage in Detroit. When asked why he never showed it to the
    people at the Sixth Floor when they asked, he shot back: "I
    don't have anything to prove."
    A 70-year-old music publisher who once worked with jazz
    great Charlie Parker and produced and co-wrote songs with
    outlaw country singer Johnny Paycheck ("Take This Job and
    Shove It"), Mayhew said over the phone that he was planning
    to come to Dallas the following week to see some of the
    songwriters with whom he still works. It was just a
    coincidence, he said, that it would be the day before the 34th
    anniversary of Kennedy's death, and he promised to call when
    he got to town.
    He phoned a few days later and agreed to meet, but warned he
    might not have much to say. Three hours into a meal of coffee
    and apple pie at the Grand Hotel, he was still talking.
    A short man in a windbreaker, Mayhew says he is "neither rich
    nor crazy." He explains that he was a coin and metal collector
    in the early 1960s when he became fascinated with all the metal
    objects that were created with Kennedy's likeness after his
    death. He produced a book on the subject, then went on to
    collect all manner of Kennedy memorabilia. It's a hobby he
    likens to a disease.
    He was in search of more memorabilia when he came to Dallas
    in 1970 and attended an auction of 20 parcels of D. Harold
    Byrd's real estate, including the building leased to the Texas
    School Book Depository. He wasn't even a registered bidder,
    he says, but wound up offering $650,000 for the property. He
    claims he beat out two other bidders, including an entrepreneur
    who was going to raze the building and sell it off at a dollar a
    brick.
    "It was just a piece of real estate everyone wanted to forget,"
    Mayhew says.
    Mayhew explains he wasn't sure what he was going to do with
    the building -- or how he was going to pay for it. At the time,
    he says, he was making $100,000 yearly working for a music
    company. He eventually seized on the idea of turning the
    building into a "first-rate museum."
    Shortly after he bought the building, the Texas School Book
    Depository moved out. But not before one of their employees
    gave him an affidavit, he says, confirming that D. Harold Byrd
    had instructed a workman to remove a window from the Sixth
    Floor. But "he went to the wrong side of the building," Mayhew
    claims, "and took it from the southwestern corner."
    Afraid that a vacant building was more susceptible to vandals,
    Mayhew says he hired two carpenters to remove the two
    windows and the surrounding casement that comprised the
    sniper's nest and replace them with identical windows from the
    building's north side. Mayhew says he stored the original
    windows in Dallas for 20 years.
    Mayhew insists that several wealthy Dallasites, whom he
    refuses to name, initially backed his plans for a museum. He
    quit his job to work on it full-time, spending weeks on end in
    Dallas and living in the building, where he began housing
    assassination artifacts. He claims to have spent more than
    $10,000 on architectural renderings of the proposed museum.
    But the city hated his idea. The Dallas Times Herald, he says,
    ran a full-page cartoon lampooning his idea with a caricature of
    a museum showing a neon arrow pointing up to the sixth floor
    sniper's perch. Esquire magazine chided his plans in its annual
    Dubious Achievement Award issue, asking who was going to
    get the JFK chicken franchise.
    Mayhew says that while the local campaign against him raged,
    he was also fending off an attempt by the state's Commission to
    Commemorate JFK to get the Texas Legislature to seize the
    building from him. Meanwhile, Mayhew recalls that city
    planners repeatedly rebuffed his attempts to get building
    permits, once claiming that the building's wooden interior was
    not fit for refurbishing.
    His backers eventually pulled out, and he was hard-pressed to
    find new ones. He was falling behind on his $6,000-a-month
    payments, but he claims that the president of Republic National
    Bank was going to give him an extension. He says he vowed to
    fight foreclosure on the grounds that the building was his
    homestead.
    "I had no income, a building producing no revenue that was
    costing me $6,000 a month, and all I ever received was
    constant blows from the city and state," Mayhew says. "The
    pressure was mounting."
    In the summer of 1972, a small fire broke out in the building.
    The police charged one of Mayhew's employees, Winfred
    Anderson, with arson. Anderson pleaded guilty and received
    probation; he also implicated Mayhew as the person who was
    behind the fire -- which Mayhew vehemently denies. The
    police, Mayhew insists, let him know that they would arrest him
    if he set foot in Dallas County again.
    Not only does Mayhew profess his innocence, he claims he
    was framed in a convoluted plot to keep him away from Dallas
    so he would lose the building. Two weeks after the fire was
    set, the bank foreclosed on the building, which D. Harold Byrd
    promptly re-purchased. The city, Mayhew says, confiscated
    Mayhew's memorabilia left inside the building.
    Mayhew says he went back to Nashville a broken man. His
    wife left him and took his two children to live in New York. He
    still nursed his idea of building a museum: A year or two later,
    he hooked up with Gerald Jay Steinberg, a Washington,
    D.C.-area dentist who claimed to have the largest Kennedy
    collection in the world. Together they opened an antique store
    in Georgetown, while they set about cataloging their combined
    collection for future display. On weekends, Mayhew says, he
    commuted by bus to New York to try and patch up his
    marriage -- to no avail.
    Mayhew's relationship with the dentist soured after just five
    months. Both men accuse each other of stealing a chunk of
    their respective collections. Steinberg says that Mayhew
    claimed to have the sixth-floor window back then, but
    Steinberg says he never saw it.
    Mayhew went back to Nashville to begin rebuilding his music
    career. He also says he opened a small but classy JFK
    museum that was eventually burglarized. In 1987, "in a moment
    of weakness," Mayhew says, he wrote to Conover Hunt, who
    was organizing the Sixth Floor Museum.
    "I told her I had the window and wanted $250,000 for it,"
    Mayhew says. "I just wanted to recoup just some of the money
    I felt this city owed me."
    He is asked why, then, he didn't send Hunt the pictures and
    dimensions she requested.
    Mayhew claims it wasn't that simple. He says Hunt didn't
    respond to his letter for some time, and that when she first
    contacted him, she really didn't seem interested. He felt she
    was just blowing him off.
    And maybe she had good reason. After all, he never offered
    one bit of proof that he has the windows. If there's any reason
    at all not to dismiss Mayhew, it's the simple fact that the
    window on display on the Sixth Floor is not the real deal.
    Maybe, just maybe, Mayhew's telling the truth.
    "We know there are two windows, and you've proven that
    one's not it," he says. "So you take it from there."
    For the last decade, Mayhew has had no contact with the Sixth
    Floor Museum. Then, several months ago, he says he received
    a letter from the museum's archivist, Gary Mack, a former
    Dallas television station announcer and JFK researcher -- and
    one of those who isn't sure anymore that the window on
    display is so authentic. Mayhew says Mack told him he was
    interested in his collection.
    "He said things had changed, and he understood the difficulties
    I had in the past," Mayhew says. "He said he wanted to come
    to Nashville and see my collection and that maybe we could
    join forces."
    Mayhew says he eventually responded to Mack's letter, writing
    that perhaps they would meet if the museum had indeed
    changed. Mayhew says he wants the museum to acknowledge
    that he once owned the building: A plaque on the outside of the
    building only mentions Byrd. He also wants the museum's
    historical information to mention him and acknowledge that he
    saved the building from being destroyed. Mayhew believes that
    had the other bidders gotten the building instead of him, they
    would have torn it down.
    At the bottom of the letter, Mayhew added: "P.S. In case we
    do join forces, I get the chicken franchise" -- a reference to the
    Esquire Dubious Achievement Award 25 years earlier. Mack
    never responded to Mayhew's letter.
    Marian Ann Montgomery's title at the Sixth Floor Museum is
    -- no kidding -- director of interpretation. All that means is that
    she's the museum's chief curator, but it's still a creepy job
    description to put on one's résumé. Maybe the conspiracy
    theorists are right; maybe we're not paranoid enough.
    As visitors stream into the Sixth Floor Museum, looking at the
    window they assume is real, Montgomery must now consider
    that someone has interpreted this relic all wrong.
    "Well, obviously there's some difference between the window
    and pictures of it," Montgomery says. "We're in the process, as
    museums always are, of checking to see if we need to change
    the caption."
    This included Montgomery phoning Caruth Byrd a few days
    ago and asking him some pointed questions about the window
    that once hung in his father's house. Montgomery asked Byrd if
    he had any explanation for why there were no marks on the
    bottom of the window.
    "Hell, maybe my father had it cleaned up," Byrd says he told
    her.
    During our conversation, I mentioned to him that another
    concern was that smudge of paint and putty that appears on his
    window, but is not on the window photographed after the
    assassination.
    "Maybe my dad broke the glass and it was repaired," he offers
    this time.
    Byrd is clearly agitated by this line of inquiry. "Hell, if they don't
    want it at the museum, I'll take it back," he barks. "I'll sell it to
    someone. I'll sell it to Michael Jackson."
    Montgomery also contacted Mayhew by phone. Montgomery
    says that Mayhew had "some relations with the museum that
    were less than friendly before. We have to rebuild that
    relationship before we can get close to him."
    She told him she was coming to Nashville and wanted to see
    his collection and his window. He told her she couldn't come.
    "They just want to use me," Mayhew says. "They don't have
    anything I want."
    But this man from Tennessee might well have something the
    Sixth Floor folks want -- them, and the millions who only think
    they've seen, and seen through, a little bit of history.

    Joe
    CONECA #N-3446

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