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What a find!
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Article Excerpt : ‘PHILADELPHIA -- As a collector of artifacts, Richard "Dana" Moore makes a habit of scrolling through Goodwill's online thrift store, and one day in 2022, the history buff came across an item that piqued his interest.
A post in the historical documents section featured the image of a framed item purporting to contain a fragment of George Washington's tent. It came with a written note saying the tent had been displayed at an exposition commemorating the 300th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown in the Virginia Colony.
"I was like, 'This can't be.' So I was a little bit astonished," Moore told CNN.
Moore was skeptical of the posting so he initially held off on bidding for two weeks.
"There are a lot of fakes out there," he added. "There's always something that's not real, that looks to be real."
Moore said he took a closer look at the torn note and determined it looked like it had aged over the years along with the fragment, which is 4 inches wide and over 5 inches long.
"I jumped in with both feet. I said, 'Hell with it.' I'm gonna bid on it," he said.
Moore told CNN that he bid a little over $1,700 on the artifact and won. He initially didn't tell his wife, Susan Bowen, and hid it in their home. Now, he said, she agrees that he hit it out of the park: The artifact was confirmed to be a piece of Washington's dining tent, and Moore estimates it to be worth tens of thousands of dollars.’
Full article:
Piece of Washington's war tent at Museum of American Revolution in Philly after found at Goodwill
Video:
Article Excerpt : ‘PHILADELPHIA -- As a collector of artifacts, Richard "Dana" Moore makes a habit of scrolling through Goodwill's online thrift store, and one day in 2022, the history buff came across an item that piqued his interest.
A post in the historical documents section featured the image of a framed item purporting to contain a fragment of George Washington's tent. It came with a written note saying the tent had been displayed at an exposition commemorating the 300th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown in the Virginia Colony.
"I was like, 'This can't be.' So I was a little bit astonished," Moore told CNN.
Moore was skeptical of the posting so he initially held off on bidding for two weeks.
"There are a lot of fakes out there," he added. "There's always something that's not real, that looks to be real."
Moore said he took a closer look at the torn note and determined it looked like it had aged over the years along with the fragment, which is 4 inches wide and over 5 inches long.
"I jumped in with both feet. I said, 'Hell with it.' I'm gonna bid on it," he said.
Moore told CNN that he bid a little over $1,700 on the artifact and won. He initially didn't tell his wife, Susan Bowen, and hid it in their home. Now, he said, she agrees that he hit it out of the park: The artifact was confirmed to be a piece of Washington's dining tent, and Moore estimates it to be worth tens of thousands of dollars.’
Full article:
Piece of Washington's war tent at Museum of American Revolution in Philly after found at Goodwill
