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Saturday, November 21, 2009
TV Schedule Programs A-Z MPT Productions
 
The grid below shows MPT television schedule for the next 24 hours. You can change the start date and time using the dropdown boxes. To go to a page that lists programs for just one channel, please click on the channel logo below.
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   Antiques Roadshow

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW cameras capture tales of family heirlooms, yard sale bargains and long-lost items salvaged from attics and basements, while experts reveal the fascinating truths about these finds.


http://www.pbs.org/antiques

 
Upcoming Episodes
04:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 03, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 03, 2009
MPT2

Previous Episodes
03:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 20, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 20, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , November, 19, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 17, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 17, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 17, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Three
Episode #1215

Centuries before texting, girls were expressing themselves via embroidered samplers, as appraiser Nancy Druckman shows ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg at the Embroiderer's Guild of America in Louisville, Kentucky. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, ROADSHOW appraisers stitch together a colorful assortment of finds, including a rare, circa 1910 Dirk Van Erp lamp, originally bought for about $100; an exceptionally well-preserved 1876 portrait Jumeau doll with all original parts, except her hair; and a fortunate Kentucky corner cupboard - at one time destined to be burned and thrown away - made of locally grown wood and valued at $8,500.


Monday , November, 16, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 15, 2009
MPT2
05:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 15, 2009
MPT
09:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 13, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 13, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 13, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , November, 12, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 10, 2009
MPT2
03:29 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 10, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 10, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour Two
Episode #1214

Host Mark L. Walberg travels to the historic Civil War battle site in Perryville, Kentucky, in this second hour of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW's visit to Louisville. He's joined by appraiser Rafael Eledge, who displays some valuable Confederate belt buckles and instructs collectors how to avoid falling for a fake. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, there's authentic excitement over such original finds as a late 18th-century heirloom Kentucky sugar chest; an 1860 rococo revival table whose top sports a painting of Mt. Vernon; and a pair of boxing gloves signed twice by Louisville native son and World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali - once as Cassius Clay, in 1963, and again as Muhammad Ali 40 years later -valued at $2,000 to $3,000.


Monday , November, 09, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 08, 2009
MPT2
05:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 08, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 06, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 06, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , November, 06, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , November, 05, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 03, 2009
MPT2
04:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 03, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , November, 03, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Louisville, Ky - Hour One
Episode #1213

Host Mark L. Walberg welcomes ANTIQUES ROADSHOW viewers to Louisville, Kentucky, home of the world-famous Kentucky Derby. It's also the birthplace of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Walberg and appraiser Mike Gutierrez head for the Muhammad Ali Center to talk about collecting memorabilia of the former World Heavyweight Champion. At the Kentucky International Convention Center, appraisers are off to the races with such winning discoveries as valuable original cover art for The Saturday Evening Post by John Falter, brought by his stepdaughter, who modeled for the illustration when she was five years old; an early 19th-century embroidered silk mourning picture; and an enduring symbol of the Kentucky Derby: an heirloom mint julep cup created by Louisville silversmith William Kendrick in the mid-19th-century, estimated to be worth $2,000.


Monday , November, 02, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour One
Episode #1210

When ANTIQUES ROADSHOW arrives in Spokane, Washington, host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser David McCarron head to the city's historic Riverfront Park where a century-old carousel drives a conversation about the ups and downs of collecting carousel animals. At the Spokane Convention Center, it's a wild ride for the ROADSHOW appraisers when collectors bring such diverse finds as a 1905 bird's-eye-view map of Spokane; a necklace that flunks a critical test; and a collection of items - a framed photo and letters dating back to 1862 - signed by President Lincoln, assigned a value of $75, 000 to $100,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 01, 2009
MPT2
05:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour One
Episode #1210

When ANTIQUES ROADSHOW arrives in Spokane, Washington, host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser David McCarron head to the city's historic Riverfront Park where a century-old carousel drives a conversation about the ups and downs of collecting carousel animals. At the Spokane Convention Center, it's a wild ride for the ROADSHOW appraisers when collectors bring such diverse finds as a 1905 bird's-eye-view map of Spokane; a necklace that flunks a critical test; and a collection of items - a framed photo and letters dating back to 1862 - signed by President Lincoln, assigned a value of $75, 000 to $100,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , November, 01, 2009
MPT
08:30 PM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 30, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 30, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 30, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , October, 29, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 27, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 27, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 27, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Unique Antiques
Episode #1120

ROADSHOW's "Unique Antiques" showcases some of the most outlandish, kitschy and downright morbidly fascinating antiques and collectibles of the series' last decade. Warning: These objects have been appraised by trained professionals; don't try this at home! Highlights include a Weller pottery humidor in the shape of a skull; a chair once belonging to Chang Boker, the owner's great-grandfather and half of the 19th-century's world famous conjoined twins, Chang and Eng; and a collection of tin cans salvaged from a 19th-century dump and valued at $10,000 to $14,000.


Monday , October, 26, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , October, 25, 2009
MPT2
05:00 PM
Tucson, Az - Hour 3
Episode #1109

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW wraps up its trip to Tucson, Arizona, as host Mark Walberg and appraiser Colleene Fesko tour the Tucson Museum of Art, rounding up works of art depicting horses. At the Tucson Convention Center, crowds brave the 104-degree heat to bring in some cool objects, including a rare collection of 1956 Olympics memorabilia saved by the owner's father, trainer for the gold medal-winning American basketball team that included Bill Russell; a striking collection of World War II American propaganda posters; and a trio of paintings by acclaimed 20th-century French "outsider" artist Gaston Chaissac, given an auction estimate of $50,000-$100,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , October, 25, 2009
MPT
08:30 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 23, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 23, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 23, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , October, 22, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 20, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 20, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 20, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour Two
Episode #1208

In San Antonio, Texas, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Beth Szecila visit the Witte Museum's collection of horn furniture, a Bavarian craft popularized in 19th-century America by Texas maker Wenzel Friederich, whose patrons included Queen Victoria and Kaiser Wilhelm I. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, appraisers corral treasures from all over the map, including a controversial silver statue of St. Catherine that could be a fabulously valuable medieval masterpiece - or a 17th-century copy; a 200-year-old heirloom needlepoint sampler from the owner's Newport, Rhode Island, forebears; and a massive desk and bookcase, made in the mid-19th-century German-Texan tradition, valued at $7,000 to $10,000.


Monday , October, 19, 2009
MPT
03:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 16, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 16, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 13, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 13, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 13, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
San Antonio, Tx - Hour One
Episode #1207

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is in San Antonio, Texas, where host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Christopher Mitchell immerse themselves in the distinctive Texas atmosphere of the Buckhorn Saloon and Museum for a discussion of antique Colt pistols. At the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, history continues to echo through the treasures brought for appraisal, including a valuable Chinese Tang Dynasty pottery horse, purchased mostly with cartons of cigarettes by the owner's G.I. husband in post-World War II Japan; an unusually large heirloom Teco vase from Terra Cotta, Illinois; and a collection of rare World Series programs, including the second one ever published -documenting the 1905 series between the winning New York Giants and the Philadelphia Athletics - estimated to be worth $12,800.


Monday , October, 12, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , October, 11, 2009
MPT2
05:00 PM
Tucson, Az - Hour 1
Episode #1107

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark Walberg gets a taste of Tucson, Arizona, history from the seat of an antique buggy, part of the impressive stable of horse-drawn conveyances housed at the Tucson Rodeo Parade Museum and proudly mobilized for the annual Tucson Rodeo Parade. At the Tucson Convention Center, it's a pageant of prized possessions, including two Picasso-designed vases bought in France; a court affidavit submitted by Jimmy Carter to the state of Maine on the eve of the 1976 election appealing their decision list him on the ballot as James Earl Carter; and an ornate saddle - purchased for the owner as a child and ridden just once when she competed for the title of Coolidge Cotton Days Rodeo Queen in Coolidge, Arizona - a cinch to bring $6,000 to $8,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , October, 11, 2009
MPT
08:30 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 09, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 09, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Friday , October, 09, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Thursday , October, 08, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 06, 2009
MPT2
03:00 AM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 06, 2009
MPT
12:00 AM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.
Rebroadcast

Tuesday , October, 06, 2009
MPT
08:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour Three
Episode #1212

In this final episode from Spokane, Washington, ANTIQUES ROADSHOW host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser Bill Mercer visit the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture and its collection of exquisite beaded bags, crafted by Indian tribes of the Columbia River region. Discoveries abound at the Spokane Convention Center as well, including a circa 1900 Louis XIV-style clock, made in France and acquired by the owner's grandfather, who owned a silver mine in Montana; a beautifully preserved 19th-century silk Heriz rug; and an heirloom desk and chair used at the United States House of Representatives from 1857 to 1873. Rarely found together - with the desks being far scarcer than the chairs- the matched pair prompts appraiser Brian Witherell of Witherell's Americana Auctions to estimate the set's combined valued at $40,000.


Monday , October, 05, 2009
MPT
07:00 PM
Spokane, Wa - Hour One
Episode #1210

When ANTIQUES ROADSHOW arrives in Spokane, Washington, host Mark L. Walberg and appraiser David McCarron head to the city's historic Riverfront Park where a century-old carousel drives a conversation about the ups and downs of collecting carousel animals. At the Spokane Convention Center, it's a wild ride for the ROADSHOW appraisers when collectors bring such diverse finds as a 1905 bird's-eye-view map of Spokane; a necklace that flunks a critical test; and a collection of items - a framed photo and letters dating back to 1862 - signed by President Lincoln, assigned a value of $75, 000 to $100,000.
Rebroadcast

Sunday , October, 04, 2009
MPT2

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