After all, moving an M1 tank anywhere was out of the question.
“I specialize in cars and have
seen my share of amazing collections, but when I saw what Mr.
Littlefield had amassed at his home I was blown away,” says Ian
Kelleher, whose specialist role sees him toggling between Auctions
America and its renowned collector-car sister company RM Auctions. “The
sheer size alone of these things is just amazing, really humbling. You
just can’t ignore the presence of a SCUD or Russian ICBM missile.
They’re intimidating weapons of mass destruction, but they’re also a
piece of history.”
Kelleher says the auction will
unfold on Littlefield’s sprawling hilltop estate, where nearly a dozen
purpose-built buildings house 114 vehicles — tanks and anything else
that moves — and dozens of super-sized weapons. He says the only reason
the entire collection didn’t go to The Collings Foundation was that the
sale was necessary for the museum to pay the transfer costs associated
with the massive gift.
One lot in particular stopped
Kelleher in his tracks: a 1942 Sherman M4 tank, much like the one his
tank commander father drove in World War II. “It gave me chills,” he
says. The tank was built by Ford, and features a 450-hp V8, not to
mention a 76mm main gun and smaller machine guns. It is expected to sell
for between $275,00 and $325,000.
Also up for sale is a so-called
Jumbo Sherman, thought to be only one of seven or eight in existence,
and is expected to fetch between $1.4 million and $1.6 million. The
Jumbo appellation comes from the oversized protective plates welded onto
the tank, allowing these armed vehicles to take the lead in assaults
whose barrages would have knocked out standard M4s.
That
unique Sherman is, however, matched by an equally rare Littlefield
bird, a German Panzerkampfwagen tank that would have been a target for
its American counterpart. A combination of sheer scarcity and its
history — after duty in the Second World War, it made its way to Syria
and was then captured by the Israelis during the famous Six Day War in
1967 — have set the Panzer’s estimated price at between $2.4 million and
$2.6 million.
“Think about it, when it comes to
World War II (the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion is this June)
all we increasingly have left are soldiers’ letters and physical
artifacts like this,” says Kelleher, noting that the Panzer is one of
five select Littlefield lots being sold with a reserve. “It’s important
that this survives for history’s sake.”
Among other highlights are a
Soviet-made Surface to Surface Missile (SCUD-A), which came to represent
that tense Cold War era ($300,000 to $350,000); a DUKW Amphibious Truck
also synonymous with European and Pacific battles ($50,000 to $75,000);
and a massive Combat Engineer Tractor ($20,000 to $30,000), perhaps for
when your John Deere won’t cut it.
Although the Littlefield
Collection will clearly generate deep fascination among historians,
those usually aren’t folks rolling in cash. So who might step up to the
plate come auction time? One guess would be the likes of Microsoft
co-founder Paul Allen, whose similar historical passion led to the
creation of the Flying Heritage Collection in Everett, Wash.
Kelleher confirms that interested parties include “existing
collectors of military pieces from the United States Australia, Germany,
France and the United Kingdom.” While Kelleher says at first he thought
generating interest in the auction would be a challenge, he’s been
surprised at the number of inquiries from his connections in the
collector car world.“Many of the top (car) collectors have big estates, and it’s clear there’s a novelty in having a tank on their property,” he says. “Since most of these machines run, they could even drive around in them.”
Even if you had pockets deep enough to spring for a tank, there’s the small matter of getting a multi-ton machine from Jacques Littlefield’s California house to yours.
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