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Here is mine - on a Camelot program - they look alike but maybe others will chime in.
Hi Henry,
Thank you very much and for showing your example,
Tracy.
My pleasure!!
Henry's looks good - the OP appears a forgery IMO.
I think they're both real. The A in Andrews starts off unusually awkward but everything else looks like I'd expect. Probably not signed under ideal conditions.
Hi Steve, Thank you for your help, I had no reason to doubt it really due to the origins of it, it would seem pretty pointless to fake a signature on something and then donate it to charity to be sold for next to nothing,
Tracy.
Hi Tracy,
You have a nice find there.
Keep hunting! Someone bought a copy of the Declaration of Independence for $2 at a charity store that the store no doubt thought was another common, worthless reproduction like they saw all the time. It was a rare early 19th-century version that the buyer sold for $525,000 as I recall.
Unfortunately, this is not signed by Julie.
I think it was signed in person at a crowded event and the original owner was holding it while Julie signed it. The signature is awkward because it was signed awkwardly. I have been to events where records and similar items were signed in haste and the signatures are not the best.
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