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George Washington's copy of US constitution sells for $9.8m

George Washington
Portrait of George Washington, whose personal copy of the US Constitution and Bill of Rights fetched $9.8m at auction. Photograph: Stock Montage/Getty Images

George Washington's personal copy of the US constitution and bill of rights sold for $9.8m (£6.3m) at auction on Friday, setting a record for any American book or historic document.

Bidders at Christie's New York salesroom and others on the telephone competed for the first US president's signed, gold-embossed volume dating to 1789, which had a pre-sale estimate of up to $3m.

The non-profit Mount Vernon Ladies Association of the Union, which maintains the historic Mount Vernon estate in Virginia that was Washington's home and is now open to the public, was the successful bidder.

"The unique book had been in the Mount Vernon library until 1876, and will soon be returned to that library," said Chris Coover, senior specialist of books and manuscripts at Christie's.

The bound volume was Washington's personal copy of the Acts of Congress and is noteworthy for his bold signature marking it as his own.

The Acts of Congress include the Constitution, whose preamble promises to "secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity," and the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the constitution, which establish such fundamental liberties as the right to free speech, press, assembly and religion.

Christie's described the book as being in near-pristine condition after 223 years. It was specially printed for Washington in 1789, his first year in office as president.

The margins include Washington's handwritten brackets and notations highlighting key passages concerning the president's responsibilities.

The Acts of Congress volume was sold from Washington's library at Mt Vernon in 1876 and eventually bought at auction by collector Richard Dietrich in the 1960s. It was being sold by the family's estate.

Similar volumes created for Thomas Jefferson, the first secretary of state and third US president, and attorney general John Jay, are in Indiana's Lilly Library and a private collection, respectively.

Rare books and manuscripts have achieved impressive prices in recent years.

An autographed manuscript of Lincoln's 1864 election victory speech sold for $3.4m in February 2009, which set a record for an American manuscript at the time. A 1787 letter written from Washington to his nephew on the subject of the ratification of the Constitution fetched $3.2m in December 2009.

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ASTON MARTIN ONE-77

 

Car No.40 of 77 Made.

 

The Client is seeking 1.2 Million Sterling for the Car.

 

The Cars were originally sold by Aston Martin for 1Million, plus costs.

 

Equivalent cars are available for 2 Million Sterling – 2.7 Million Dollars.

 

We are Offering the Car at 1.4 Million, but it should be considerably more.

 

Our Client wishes for the Sale to be Confidential, and approaching clients will need to provide documents

BMW i3 gets luxury makeover for opening London BMW i Store

BMW i3 Concept

BMW has unveiled a new luxury version of the company's i3 Concept as part of the opening celebrations for the manufacturer's first i Store in London. Designers lathered the cabin in premium wood, leather and natural fibers, all with an eye toward sustainability. The wood trim is carved from Eucalyptus trees harvested in Europe, and the leather is tanned using a special olive tree extract instead of harsh chemicals.


The cabin is outfitted with bench seats front and rear, which allows for easy ingress and egress in tight city parking situations. The driver, meanwhile, is treated to three displays for vehicle information, climate control and entertainment options. BMW says the design does away with the need for a center console.

Power still comes from a 170 horsepower electric motor with 170 pound-feet of torque, which is good enough to scoot the concept to 62 mph in under eight seconds, thanks in part to a single-speed transmission. Top speed sits at 93 mph. The concept relies on lithium-ion batteries, which can be charged in around six hours via a standard socket, though a quick charger can reduce that time to around an hour. Expect a range between 80 or 100 miles depending on usage.

The organiser of the Goodwood Festival of Speed hopes a UK-based philanthropist will keep an important part of our motoring heritage at Brooklands, where it held the outer circuit lap record.



Bentley auctioned by Bonhams at Goodwood Festival of Speed on June 29 2012
The ex-"Tim" Birkin Blower Bentley is expected to fetch more than £8 million when it's auctioned during the Goodwood Festival of Speed 

The Earl of March, founder of Goodwood's Festival of Speed, has called on the Government to ensure that "the most famous British car of all time", a 1931 supercharged Bentley that held the record on the Brooklands outer circuit of 137.96mph, is sold to a responsible owner when it is auctioned at the festival on June 29.

In the Telegraph Letters Page, Lord March, as President of the Brooklands Museum Trust, writes of his hope that a buyer will be found who would enable the car to stay at Brooklands, in Surrey, but that, failing that, "an enthusiastic philanthropist" be the successful bidder.

He writes: "This car epitomises all that is good about the British spirit. It possesses historic, intellectual, technical, aesthetic, and exhilarating qualities… It would indeed be a very sad day for the vintage car world if the car left this country, and one would hope that an Export Licence would be demanded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport."

The ex-Sir Henry "Tim" Birkin 1929-31 Bentley 4½-Litre Supercharged single-seater is part of the collection of watchmaker George Daniels, along with six other cars and two motorcycles. Bonhams expects the whole collection to make more than £8 million, with an estimate for the Bentley "on request".

Other auction highlights include a Lotus collection of 24 vehicles, from 1953 to the present, that is expected to fetch more than £1.5m.

Man stranded in desert builds motorcycle out of his broken car

Citroen 2CV motorcycleAccording to Merriam-Webster, ingenuity can be defined as "skill or cleverness in devising or combining" or "cleverness or aptness of design or contrivance." We'd say that's an apt description of a Frenchman named Emile who reportedly found himself stranded in the deserts of Northwest Africa after breaking a frame rail and a suspension swingarm underneath his Citroën 2CV.


What to do? Why, disassemble the broken hulk and build yourself a motorcycle from its pile of parts, of course! As the story goes, Emile was able to use the inventive machine to escape the desert, though not before convincing the local authorities that he wasn't an insurgent and paying a fine for importing a non-conforming vehicle...

Since Emile was the only soul in the area, nobody has been able to confirm the veracity of the events that led to the little French runabout's conversion into a makeshift motorcycle. That said, judging by the images you can see here (apparently from the March 2003 issue of 2CV Magazine), this Citroën-bred two-wheeler does indeed exist, and it was definitely fashioned from parts scavenged from an old 2CV.

Emile, wherever you are, we take our hats off to your real-life MacGyver skills, sir.

 
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