A treasure trove of Thatcher items found in a storage unit containing a Reagan statue
The items sat in a locked storage unit for years, discovered only when the vendor went to dump the items in a landfill, where a worker found and rescued them.
Items belonging to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, including rare art and personal items, have emerged for sale at auction after an unnamed landfill worker saved them from a storage unit.
"The exact circumstances of how these items came to be thrown away are unknown, although it is typical for storage companies to dispose of the contents of units when accounts are closed," Mark Wilkinson, an auctioneer at Sworders Fine Art Auctioneers in Essex, England, said of the collection.
"There are some historic objects in the collection, items that point towards some of the important relationships and events in Margaret Thatcher's tenure as the PM."
The rare collection of art pieces and personal belongings is a 22-inch tall bronze plaster bust of President Ronald Reagan, who had a close friendship with Thatcher during their overlapping administrations.
Reagan may have presented the bust to her as a gift during her state visit to the U.S. following the end of the Falklands War in 1982. The statue bore an "indistinct" signature and was dated "-82."
The statue was estimated to fetch as much as £700 (roughly $850) at auction: It ended up selling for a whopping £9000, or just under $11,000 – far more than any of the other items on offer from the collection.
The landfill worker found the items in the early 2000s as they were taken out of storage and shipped off to the landfill, following standard protocol. Amazed at what he had found, the worker took the items home to keep them safe.
Following his death, the man’s son has decided to put the items up for auction.
The collection also included a rare black and white photo of Thatcher flanked by three members of Britain’s elite SAS in gas masks holding assault rifles. The photo bore the inscription, "To Mrs. Thatcher from 22 SAS Regt."
The 22nd SAS regiment successfully freed 26 hostages at the embassy in London after a six-day siege, which significantly boosted Thatcher’s profile at the time.
The photo, estimated to go for around £600 ($750) sold for more than double that at £1,500 (just over $1800).
Sworders estimated that the highest-selling item would have been a painting of Thatcher seated in a blue dress in a green armchair, bearing a brass plaque that read, "From a true friend and admirer with sincere best wishes on your birthday, 13th October 1995."
Despite the very clear and personal nature of the piece, and the signature of Professor Bacharuddin Jusuf Habibie, at the time future Prime Minister of Indonesia, the piece sold for just over £1,100 on an estimate of £700.