StangStung wrote:
I have lots of autographs. I obtained them all for me, and hopefully one day, my son will appreciate them.
That said, I have a not insignificant number which I have purchased second hand. I've found them randomly in books at airshows, second hand stores and estate sales. I've never bought one on e-bay. But the point is, the "Ashley" in this letter very well may not be the person selling this photo/letter combo. It's equally possible that Ashley was respectful of this vet's wishes. It's those "downstream" who may not know or care of the significance. They may just see a source of cash.
I have mixed feelings about that. On the one hand, I'd like to see the wishes adhered to. But they may no longer apply if the vet giving the signature, or the recipient of the signature, are no longer around. It may be just as well that someone pays for it and keeps it in the regard which we would ascribe to it, than have it go to a landfill because it shouldn't be sold.
Hard to tell from the scant info we have here.
Good points, we don't know the back story on this particular piece. I Definetly empathize with Mr. Treff's feelings. I met and got a signed picture of a P-61 pilot (Bob Bollinder) at WWII weekend a few years back, and the next day saw multiple signed pics from the show on Ebay.

I did pick up a few signed pieces of P-40 artwork at an estate sale signed by Pappy Boyington and Robert L Scott. I hated seeing a collection broken up like that. The previous owner was obviously a WWII aviation buff.
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