Showtime to auction prominent collections Oct. 5-7

Toledo Buick pressed steel toy car in excellent, all-original condition. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image.

Toledo Buick pressed steel toy car in excellent, all-original condition. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Toledo Buick pressed steel toy car in excellent, all-original condition. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – The lifetime collection of Robert and Harriett Potter – a vast accumulation of firefighting memorabilia and other items, spanning 50-plus years – will be sold Oct. 5-7 by Showtime Auction Services, at the Washtenaw Farm Council Grounds. Around 2,000 lots of investment-grade antiques and collectibles will change hands that weekend. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 6-7.

Also offered will be Part 2 of the outstanding lifetime pedal car and toy collection of Ed and Christie Ramsey (Part 1 was sold by Showtime in the spring). Another headliner will be Session 5 of one of the best tobacco and cigar tin collections ever offered at auction. Other items culled from select collections and estates across the country will also sell. The first day of the auction, Oct. 5, will be a live audience-only session, featuring 600 lots.

“I am extremely excited about this sale,” said Mike Eckles of Showtime Auction Services. “If all we had was the Potter collection, it would be a fine auction, but when you add to that Part 2 of Ed and Christie Ramsey, plus the tobacco and cigar tin collection, plus items from over 100 other consignors, then what you have is our best auction ever.”

Days two and three (Saturday, Oct. 6, and Sunday, Oct. 7) will feature live and Internet bidding. Absentee and phone bids will also be accepted.

The auction will showcase a galaxy of items, certain to appeal to just about any collector, from the novice to the seasoned veteran. In addition to toys, pedal cars, fire fighting memorabilia and tobacco and cigar tin items, there will be country store, barber shop, a rare salesman’s sample collection, saloon, gambling, coin-op, advertising signs, cash registers and more.

Also offered will be music items (to include a Fairground band organ), many lamps (to include Tiffany, Handel and Pairpoint), farm-related items, elaborate early American furniture, showcases, a doctor’s and dentist’s cabinet (both pre-1900), rare weather vanes and more. The toys will feature pressed steel and Chein tin examples, as well as rare Fisher-Price toys and more.

“Showtime Auction Services continues to bring to the auction arena the most diverse selection of antiques ever offered for sale,” Eckles remarked. “This auction is no exception.”

One of the nearly dozen fire apparatus pieces in the sale will be a 1922 Bull Nose Mack fire chemical ladder truck (estimate: $25,000-$50,000). Vehicles of the toy variety will include a circa 1920s Gendron Willys Knight Pioneer line pedal car in all original condition (estimate: $5,000-$10,000); and a Toledo Buick pressed steel toy car in excellent shape (estimate: $10,000-$15,000).

Music-related lots will feature an 1899 Symphonium Eroica triple disc music box (estimate: $15,000-$30,000); and a Wurlitzer Model 81 jukebox on the original Model 810 Mae West stand (estimate: $7,500-$1,500). Rare slices of Americana will include an 1880s Samuel Robb cigar store Indian (estimate: $50,000-$75,000); and an 1890s running deer weather vane (estimate: $5,000-$15,000).

Two items certain to wow the crowd are a rare 1900 Koch’s salesman’s sample barber chair (estimate: $35,000-$50,000); and an equally scarce Buerger Brothers straight razor display (“The Nymph”), one of four straight razor displays in the auction. An advertising sign of note is the 1924 Johnson Drug Store leaded glass and jeweled trade sign (estimate: $5,000-$15,000).

Cigar tins will be served up in abundance (about 200 in all). A rare Home Run cigar tin is expected to fetch $3,000-$7,500.

Lamps will also be plentiful, with names such as Pairpoint, Handel and Pittsburgh. A rare Tiffany lamp with both shade and base marked should hit $10,000-$15,000. Also, a No. 6 National Cash Register with oak base is expected to make $3,500-$4,500.

Rounding out just some of the auction’s anticipated top earners: a large Pierce Cycles advertising banner measuring 41 inches by 85 inches should realize $5,000-$10,000; a Charles Fey dice spinner in excellent working condition carries an estimate of $5,000-$10,000; and a rare Mills Novelty Co. 5-cent Baseball slot machine is expected to reach $3,000-$6,000.

The auction times are Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; and Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. A hosted cocktail party will be held Friday, Oct. 5, from 5-6:30 p.m., at the Michigan Fire House Museum in Ypsilanti, Mich., not far from Ann Arbor. A complimentary lunch will also be served, on Friday, from 11 a.m.-1 p.m.

To learn more about Showtime Auction Services and the Oct. 5-7 auction, email MikeEckles@aol.com or phone 951-453-2415.

View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


Extremely rare circa 1900 Koch's salesman's sample barber chair. Estimate: $35,000-$50,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Extremely rare circa 1900 Koch’s salesman’s sample barber chair. Estimate: $35,000-$50,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Samuel Robb cigar store Indian made around the 1880s, in great shape. Estimate: $50,000-$75,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Samuel Robb cigar store Indian made around the 1880s, in great shape. Estimate: $50,000-$75,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Wurlitzer Model 81 jukebox on original Model 810 Mae West stand. Estimate: $7,500-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image. 
Wurlitzer Model 81 jukebox on original Model 810 Mae West stand. Estimate: $7,500-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image. v
Beautiful and rare Tiffany lamp with both shade and base marked. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Beautiful and rare Tiffany lamp with both shade and base marked. Estimate: $10,000-$15,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Charles Fey dice spinner in excellent working condition. Estimate: $5,000-$10,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Charles Fey dice spinner in excellent working condition. Estimate: $5,000-$10,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Rare Coca-Cola tray from 1908 depicting a partially clad young woman. Estimate: $5,000-$10,000. Showtime Auction Services image.
Rare Coca-Cola tray from 1908 depicting a partially clad young woman. Estimate: $5,000-$10,000. Showtime Auction Services image.

Art, jewelry, coins draw attention to Shelley’s sale Sept. 20

Pal Fried painting. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Pal Fried painting. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Pal Fried painting. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.

HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. – Shelley’s Auction Gallery will be hosting its Fall Premier Online Auction on Thursday, Sept. 20, at 6 p.m. EDT. There is something for everyone in this online-only auction featuring several original oils by listed artists, signed jewelry, a diverse coin collection, silver including Buccellati and Tiffany, over 45 pieces of Belleek china, and much more. LiveAuctioneers.com will provide Internet live bidding.

Original oils by listed artists include Margaretha Roosenboom, Pal Fried, P. Ewert, Wesley Elbridge Webber, Franz Xavier Wolfle and others. Of particular note is the oil on canvas, Prima Ballerina, by Hungarian-American artist, Pal Fried (1893-1976), who painted this particular pose in a variety of colors. This ballerina in a yellow tutu, set against a background of blues and tans is particularly striking.

Shelley’s exquisite selection of estate jewelry includes several pieces of emerald and diamond jewelry, Van Cleef & Arpels and Tiffany & Co. Especially alluring is the one of two, signed, Van Cleef and Arpels brooches being offered. Diamonds encrust two platinum birds, watching over a nest containing their three “eggs” of diamonds, and perched atop a branch of 18K yellow gold. Rubies, one emerald, and one sapphire serve to further adorn this distinctive brooch.

For the coin, gold or silver collector, a large collection of coins, recently acquired from a longtime coin collector are coming up for auction. Several gold coins, silver coins, full and partial coin sets, commemoratives, Mercury and Roosevelt dimes, Morgan and Peace silver dollars, Walking Liberty halves, Standing Liberty quarters, wheat pennies, V nickels and much more make up the 75-plus coin lots, featuring both circulated and uncirculated coins, so meticulously maintained by this collector. As well, the complete type set Gold Coins of Mexico includes the 2 peso, 2.5 peso, 5 peso, 10 peso, 20 peso, and 50 peso, and is expected to be a favorite.

Collectors of fine porcelain and china won’t be disappointed with an offering of Nippon, Lladro, Dresden and Belleek pieces. The Belleek china comes from the estate of a local collector who cared for her collection and features a rare black mark, several other gold marks, numbered Collector’s Society pieces, and more – all in very good condition with no cracks or chips.

Other items include an Edwardian period platinum lorgnette, Civil War trepanning set, swords, pocket watches and more. For additional information, call 828-698-8485 or e-mail info@shelleysauction.com.

This will be an online auction only. View the fully illustrated catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

View the fully illustrated catalog and register to bid absentee or live via the Internet as the sale is taking place by logging on to www.LiveAuctioneers.com.


ADDITIONAL LOTS OF NOTE


18K gold Audemars pocket watch. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
18K gold Audemars pocket watch. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.
Emerald and diamond ring. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Emerald and diamond ring. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.
Lorgnette. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Lorgnette. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.
Over 45 pieces of Belleek. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Over 45 pieces of Belleek. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.
Signed Tiffany and Van Cleef & Arpels. Shelley's Auction Gallery image.
Signed Tiffany and Van Cleef & Arpels. Shelley’s Auction Gallery image.

Reading the Streets: Greenpoint waterfront sculptures

'Hand Sculpture,' Miggy Buck; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.
'Hand Sculpture,' Miggy Buck; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.
‘Hand Sculpture,’ Miggy Buck; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.

NEW YORK – I stopped by the East River Waterfront Park in Greenpoint just in time to catch the sculpture exhibit, up since August, as it was coming to an end, to examine the pieces curated by the Brooklyn Waterfront Artists Coalition. The group has been putting on the show in various locations since its conception in 1982 with the emphasis on bringing art to the public instead of art for commerce.

The current sculptures follow this year’s theme of perpetual energy, which according to their website, was put together by curators that looked “at work that taps into the free energy that surrounds us, like the sun, wind and the current of the East River – sculpture that implies infinity or circular argument, and work that pays homage to the idea of environmental and social sustainability.”

Barbara Lubliner and Sun Jin Oh’s Plastic Bottle Pyramid certainly fits that criteria as the installation is made entirely of empty soda bottles. The clear plastic result looks a bit like an igloo through which you can examine the Manhattan skyline.

The pointing finger sculpture by Miggy Buck is less obviously a tribute to environmental sustainability, but the piece’s directing index fingers captures the idea of responsibility, whether environmental or social. That phalange seems to be angled at you and brings up every schoolteacher or mother who has scolded you. Forget littering or any other disruptive behavior, that finger seems to entreat everyone to behave well, even the kids playing in the playground nearby. There are few pieces of art that interact with the public in such a dramatic fashion while remaining completely static.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


'Hand Sculpture,' Miggy Buck; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.
‘Hand Sculpture,’ Miggy Buck; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.
'Plastic Bottle Pyramid,' Barbara Lubliner and Sun Jin Oh; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.
‘Plastic Bottle Pyramid,’ Barbara Lubliner and Sun Jin Oh; Brooklyn, N.Y. Photo by Kelsey Savage.

Gettysburg light-up topographical map sells for $14,000

This view of the Gettysburg battlefield is of Cemetery Ridge looking south, with Little Round Top and Big Round Top in the distant background. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

This view of the Gettysburg battlefield is of Cemetery Ridge looking south, with Little Round Top and Big Round Top in the distant background. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
This view of the Gettysburg battlefield is of Cemetery Ridge looking south, with Little Round Top and Big Round Top in the distant background. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) – An electric light-up map that educated visitors at the site of the Battle of Gettysburg for decades has sold at auction for $14,000.

The 30-by-30-foot map weighs 12 tons and was made partly out of asbestos. It was featured inside an auditorium in the Gettysburg National Military Park’s old visitor’s center in Gettysburg, Pa. It was sold online Friday by the federal government because the National Park Service no longer wants or needs it.

The map helped people understand the Civil War’s bloodiest battle by using blinking lights to demonstrate the positions of landmarks and the progress of the armies on a topographically accurate depiction of the site. It was up and running in 1963 for the battle’s 100th anniversary. It became obsolete in 2008 after a new visitor’s center opened.

Information about the winning bidder hasn’t been disclosed.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-09-15-12 0018GMT

 


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


This view of the Gettysburg battlefield is of Cemetery Ridge looking south, with Little Round Top and Big Round Top in the distant background. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
This view of the Gettysburg battlefield is of Cemetery Ridge looking south, with Little Round Top and Big Round Top in the distant background. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Kovels – Antiques & Collecting: Week of Sept. 17, 2012

This 4-inch fig-shape sugar shaker with a silver-plated top was given a presale estimate of $3,000-$5,000 at a Humler and Nolan auction in Cincinnati. The Mount Washington red glass shaker is decorated with tiny yellow and white flowers.
This 4-inch fig-shape sugar shaker with a silver-plated top was given a presale estimate of $3,000-$5,000 at a Humler and Nolan auction in Cincinnati. The Mount Washington red glass shaker is decorated with tiny yellow and white flowers.
This 4-inch fig-shape sugar shaker with a silver-plated top was given a presale estimate of $3,000-$5,000 at a Humler and Nolan auction in Cincinnati. The Mount Washington red glass shaker is decorated with tiny yellow and white flowers.

The first fig trees were brought to America from Spain in 1520. A ripe fig is very sweet, so it was often used when sugar was not available.

The Mount Washington Glass Co. of New Bedford, Mass., made fig-shaped containers for sugar and salt. The bottom was glass, the top silver-plated. The company also used the “figmold” shape for saltshakers with metal tops and for toothpick holders and glue pots that were altered to have open tops. The fig-shaped holders were made of translucent glass, satin glass, frosted glass and shaded glass in all colors. Many of the figs also were decorated with hand-painted flowers or other designs. Some collectors call this shape beet, onion or garlic. The Mount Washington fig pieces are popular, and some sell for thousands of dollars.

Q: At an estate sale in the 1950s, I bought a cherry drop-front desk with Queen Anne legs. It’s 39 inches high by 30 inches wide. There is a mark in a drawer that says: “Wilhelm Furniture Co., Sturgis, Michigan. Manufacturers of library and sewing tables, ladies’ desks, bookcases.” What is the desk’s value?

A: Stebbins Furniture Co. was founded in Sturgis in 1887. It was renamed Stebbins-Wilhelm Furniture Co. in 1907 and became Wilhelm Furniture Co. sometime between 1913 and 1917. Wilhelm Co. made desks, radio cabinets, bookcases, tables and smoking stands in a variety of woods and styles. The company closed in 1939. A cherry Wilhelm Co. desk recently sold for $70.

Q: My grandfather left us a three-handled porcelain tankard decorated with a blue and white medieval scene of a man and woman sitting at a table. The stamped mark on the bottom is a leafy wreath encircling a fancy monogram that appears to be “CAC.” Under the wreath is the word “Lenox.” How old is my tankard? Could it have been made by the same Lenox company that’s still around?

A: Your three-handled tankard is called a “tyg.” Tygs were filled with liquor and passed around the table after a big meal. “CAC” stands for Ceramic Art Co., a firm founded in Trenton, N.J., in 1889 by Walter Scott Lenox (1859-1920) and Jonathan Coxon (1843-1911). Coxon sold his share of the company to Lenox in 1896, but the company’s name didn’t change to Lenox Inc. until 1906. It is the same Lenox that is still in business, although its ownership has changed. The mark on your tyg was used from about 1896 to 1906, the decade when Ceramic Art Co. was solely owned by Walter Scott Lenox. So it’s an antique. If it’s in excellent condition, it would sell for more than $100.

Q: I inherited a picture of a horse named Greyhound, a world champion trotter. It says it is “an exact reproduction of the original by R.H. Palenske reproduced in talio-crome.” My father-in-law bought it at the Par Soap Co. in Oakland, Calif., in the 1930s. Can you tell us what talio-crome is?

A: Talio-crome is a printing process that uses red, green and blue to make all colors. “Talio” is derived from the word “intaglio,” the process of etching a design on a plate. Reinhold H. Palenske (1884-1954) was an artist born in Chicago. Greyhound was a famous horse, a trotter who set his first world record in 1935 when he ran from last place to first to win the Hambletonian in Goshen, N.Y. By the time he retired in 1941, Greyhound held 15 world records. The Harness Racing Hall of Fame called him the “Trotter of the Century.”

Q: I own an interesting tattered, trimmed and mended scarf about 23 inches square. The design on it is printed in red and white and includes portraits of French government officials. The title in a banner at the top reads, “Fourth Year of the French Republic 1795, Dresses of the Representatives of the People.” Another banner at the bottom reads, “Members of the Two Councils and of the Executive Directory: also of the Ministers, Judges, Messengers, Ushers and Other Public Officers.” My uncle is supposed to have brought this back from France after World War I. But why is it in English? And was it made for tourists?

A: Your antique textile probably dates from much earlier than World War I. It is copied from a print published in a 1796 book with the same title as your textile. The book was published in France first, but it was soon translated into English and published in London. It shows the proper dress of government officials in the French Republic. This was the era of the French Revolution, and people in England were curious about what was going on in France. It is likely the English were amused by some of the clothes shown in the print, too, because many of the officials were expected to wear uniforms that look like Roman togas. If your textile were in tip-top shape, it could be very valuable. As it is, it might be best to donate it to a historical society.

Q: I have one antique andiron from a set that belonged to my great-aunt, who was the niece of John Deere, the founder of the tractor company. Would one andiron be worth half as much as a pair?

A: Unfortunately, a single andiron would sell for considerably less than half the price of a pair. Even if a collector did not want to use the andiron, one does not display as well as two. And John Deere’s fame, in this case, is of no help.

Tip: Put a pad under any small rug to keep it from slipping. The pad also protects it from wear.

Sign up for our weekly email, “Kovels Komments.” It includes the latest news, tips and questions and is free, if you register on our website. Kovels.com has lists of publications, clubs, appraisers, auction houses, people who sell parts or repair antiques and more. Kovels.com adds to the information in this column and helps you find useful sources needed by collectors.

Terry Kovel answers as many questions as possible through the column. By sending a letter with a question, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of any photograph, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The volume of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, Auction Central News, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019. 

CURRENT PRICES

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

  • Skirt hem marker, wood and iron, used to measure and mark hemlines, marked “Boco patent pending,” 1930s, $30.
  • Federal Glass patio snack set, Atomic Flower pattern, white with pastel pink, yellow, turquoise and black flowers, 1950s, eight pieces, $50.
  • Dolly Darling doll, John & His Pets, brown hair, painted features, blue-and-white outfit, two dogs, two cats, duck, fencing, carrying case, Hassenfeld Bros., 1960s, doll, 4 inches, $65.
  • Kitty in the Shoes toy, tin lithograph, windup, shoe moves forward then reverses, Yanoman Japan, original box, 1960s, 5 3/4 x 5 1/2 inches, $90.
  • New Martinsville Glass Co. two-light candlesticks, Crystal Eagle pattern, Colonial Blue, wing design, inverted teardrop center, c. 1936, 5 3/4 in., pair, $125.
  • Notre Dame Fighting Irish football patch, felt, football player on green clover, brown ground, 1930s, 6 1/2 x 8 inches, $130.
  • Victorian Scottish sampler, green and red linen, wool and silk threads, alphabet, numbers, verse from “The Art of Charming” by Elizabeth Rowe, 1844, 16 inch square, $280.
  • Holiday Inn mileage meter, black plastic, yellow and blue lettering, image of Holiday Inn sign, lists miles and routes to various cities, made by Willard C. George, 1950s, 7 x 10 inches, $750.
  • Kickapoo Joy Juice store sign, tin, Lil’ Abner holding sign that says “Kickapoo Joy Juice Done Been Hoominized,” 62 x 31 inches, $995.
  • Store counter, poplar, pine stain, raised panels, turned columns with beaded ball design, stepped baseboard, 1880-1900, 36 x 90 inches, $2,000.

Available now. The best book to own if you want to buy or sell or collect – and if you order now, you’ll receive a copy with the author’s autograph. The new Kovels’ Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide, 45th edition, is your most accurate source for current prices. This large-size paperback has more than 2,500 color photographs and 40,000 up-to-date prices for more than 775 categories of antiques and collectibles. You’ll also find hundreds of factory histories and marks, a report on the record prices of the year, plus helpful sidebars and tips about buying, selling, collecting and preserving your treasures. Available online at Kovelsonlinestore.com; by phone at 800-303-1996; at your bookstore; or send $27.95 plus $4.95 postage to Price Book, P.O. Box 22900, Beachwood, OH 44122.

© 2012 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


This 4-inch fig-shape sugar shaker with a silver-plated top was given a presale estimate of $3,000-$5,000 at a Humler and Nolan auction in Cincinnati. The Mount Washington red glass shaker is decorated with tiny yellow and white flowers.
This 4-inch fig-shape sugar shaker with a silver-plated top was given a presale estimate of $3,000-$5,000 at a Humler and Nolan auction in Cincinnati. The Mount Washington red glass shaker is decorated with tiny yellow and white flowers.

Book lover spurs revitalization of picturesque Ohio town

Storefronts overlooking the Maumee River in Grand Rapids, Ohio. Image by J.D. Zollars. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.

Storefronts overlooking the Maumee River in Grand Rapids, Ohio. Image by J.D. Zollars. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.
Storefronts overlooking the Maumee River in Grand Rapids, Ohio. Image by J.D. Zollars. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.
GRAND RAPIDS, Ohio (AP) – Just before the turn of the 20th century, Azor Thurston opened a pharmacy in a distinctive Romanesque-style building. It was there he sold his Thurston’s Pills, a concoction supposedly designed to rejuvenate the patient. They cost 25 cents a bottle.

“It’s not clear to me what was in it, except that it was like a purge. It gave you energy and cleaned you out,” said Dorinda Shelley, a retired dermatologist who lives just east of town. “It was probably just herbs and stuff, but it made him pretty famous.”

Thurston died in 1922, and like most quirky tonics from the late 1800s, his pills fell from favor. But there’s a new promise of rejuvenation in Grand Rapids, this time an attempt to restore vitality and vigor to one of the most picturesque towns on the Maumee River.

Over the last two years, Dr. Shelley has purchased or rented six buildings on Front Street, the town’s main drag. Among them is the 115-year-old Thurston Building, which reopened in March as Antiques on Front.

“This is what this kind of town needed,” said Stephen Tolson, an art and antiques dealer who recently opened his own shop in Grand Rapids. “I don’t know if she considers herself a developer or not, but in my mind she developed this town.”

Dr. Shelley also has a general interest bookstore, a children’s bookstore, and a second antiques store paired with an art gallery up and running.

A history-themed bookstore, called the Happy Historian, is expected to open this month, and a record shop may come later. She also hopes to start a literacy center.

On a recent sunny day, workers were painting trim outside Antiques on Front in preparation of a small expansion. As she passed, Dr. Shelley, 71, said hello and recounted a news story she recently heard about a town in which one shopkeeper painting his storefront inspired an army of volunteers to spruce up the entire village.

“If we could do that here and get flowers, it would be cool. It really would be a destination town worth coming to,” she said. “I think a year from now there’ll be a big difference.”

Dr. Shelley’s excitement for Grand Rapids may only be exceeded by the unusual path she took to becoming a business owner.

She and her husband and fellow dermatologist Dr. Walter B. Shelley moved to northwest Ohio in 1983. The pair worked together for 14 years before retiring from their posts in 1997 to write and continue raising their family.

They were serious bibliophiles, building a book collection that nearly overtook their home. At every book sale and in every bookstore, they could find something interesting.

“My husband pointed out to me, you don’t have to read a book from cover to cover,” Dr. Shelley said. “If you just get one fact out of a book, it makes it worthwhile.”

When her husband died in 2009, they had thousands of volumes. Though work and raising children had largely kept Dr. Shelley out of Grand Rapids, her book collection drew her in. She sought the advice of Dave LaRoe, a longtime restaurateur in Grand Rapids, who told her he thought the town could support a bookstore.

In early 2011, Dr. Shelley bought a gift-shop business that was up for sale and started renovating the building. She refinished the original hardwood floors, put in white bookshelves six levels high, and decorated the space with animals and paintings of old scenes in Grand Rapids. It’s comfortable, bright, and a bit eclectic – a green-and-yellow tiger statue stout enough for a rider stands prominently in the center of the room.

The store, called Library House Books and Art, is also open and airy. Dr. Shelley shudders at the mausoleum feel many bookshops take on with their narrow aisles and ceiling-high shelves.

“They kind of close in on you,” she said. “I wanted a nice place with the idea that maybe people could be persuaded that yeah, books are kind of cool.”

Library House Books and Art opened last September. Two months later, Tolson opened his store, Muddy River Fine Art and Antiques, directly across the street.

Previously all sales were done out of his home. He’d come to know Dr. Shelley from estate sales and auctions, and it was her bookshop that gave him the push to open his own gallery.

“I’ve been looking at this town for a little while. Honestly, the main reason was Dr. Shelley,” he said. “She came in, started buying buildings, and starting filling them up.”

The majority of his sales still are made online, but he’s pleased with his 1,000-square-foot shop – and with the prospects of Grand Rapids.

“It’s a nice town, and it’s starting to get built up. We’re seeing a lot of foot traffic moving in now. When we first started it was another story,” he said.

Like the river that borders it, the health of Grand Rapids ebbs and flows. Sometimes the economy is strong, sometimes it sputters.

But in the past few years, the village lost more than it gained, including its grocery store, hardware, and pharmacy – the latter of which had operated out of Thurston’s building for more than 100 years. They were replaced by craft stores, gift shops, or in many cases, nothing.

“Last year there was like seven, eight, nine empty store fronts,” said Don Williams, who along with his wife, Teresa Marie, operates the Housley House Bed and Breakfast in Grand Rapids.

Two weeks ago, the couple opened a restaurant called Miss Lily’s on Front Street where the grocery used to be. They serve breakfast, lunch and made-from-scratch pies.

“The economy’s starting to come back, there’s more storefronts open,” Williams said.

After 35 years in Grand Rapids running LaRoe’s Restaurant, LaRoe has seen plenty of change. Three of the four gas stations that were here when he started are gone, and he’s not shy about his frustrations over a national drug-store chain buying the pharmacy to close it. But he sees the village moving in the right direction, especially with its embracing of the river.

Just as blight can be contagious, so can beautification.

When LaRoe planted a perennial garden behind his restaurant, other store owners followed suit.

Now there are flower beds up and down the alley that separates the town from the riverside park. He sees the same effect in what Dr. Shelley is doing.

But no developer can bring the town what nature provided.

“People sit back on our patio, and they say they feel like they’re on vacation when they have lunch,” he said. “It’s all because of the beauty of it. We’re going to go through ups and downs, but I don’t think we’re ever going to stay down with the natural beauty of that river and setting.”

That setting inherently leads to a tourist town, but LaRoe hopes someday a pharmacy or hardware will come back. For potential businessmen, seeing a thriving downtown void of boarded up windows and crumbling buildings has to help, he said.

Though Dr. Shelley may not have started her great experiment out of much more than a passion for books and a good opportunity, much of what she’s doing now is because she wants to revive the town. Plus, she’s having fun.

“What I’m finding is I like to get things started,” she said. “If I can help people live their dreams that’s great, plus we’re employing a lot of people.”

She’s created about 15 jobs, and hopes a few more are to come.

Already, Dr. Shelley said she’s noticing more people in town. She figures the shops will start turning a profit in a couple of years and hopes eventually to find new people to take over everything but the book shops. But she quickly adds she’s not going to desert anything.

“I know she has a lot of passion to give,” Mrs. Williams said. “She just wants to bring life back to Grand Rapids any way she can.”

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WF-09-15-12 1551GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Storefronts overlooking the Maumee River in Grand Rapids, Ohio. Image by J.D. Zollars. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.
Storefronts overlooking the Maumee River in Grand Rapids, Ohio. Image by J.D. Zollars. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.