Sunday 19 February 2023

Upstairs I Have A Man Attic,

with a small collection of books,


minerals, fossils, butterflies and some taxidermy, but if I were a billionaire what sort of collection would I have? I would hope something like this, it is the private library of Jay Walker, who founded Priceline.com, in a wing of his home in Ridgefield, Connecticut, at the bottom of the post is a list of just a few of the treasures that can be found in the library, have a scroll down and see how many you find,





in the library there are these and more:

  • A page from an original Gutenberg Bible.
  • An original 1957 Russian Sputnik, the world’s first space satellite (one of several backups built by the USSR) and the U.S. response, a Vanguard satellite made from surviving parts of the actual American satellite that blew up on the launch pad.
  • A complete skeleton of a juvenile raptor dinosaur, about the size of a large housecat.
  • One of two known Anastatic Facsimiles of the original 1776 Declaration of Independence (made directly from the original using a wet-copy process).
  • An 1890 Edison sound recording and playback device that plays wax cylinder recordings.
  • A wooden sarcophagus from ancient Egypt, dating to approximately 1,800 BC.
  • A working Nazi Enigma device for encrypted communication.
  • A copy of Robert Hooke’s 1666 book Micrographia, containing some of the earliest published depictions of insects, leaves and other objects as seen under a microscope.
  • An instruction manual for NASA’s Saturn V rocket.
  • A chandelier from the James Bond film Die Another Day, rewired with 6,000 LEDs.
  • The very first book designed as a work of art in and of itself, Goethe’s 1828 Faust included illustrations by Delacroix. The Library’s copy features a carved leather binding.
  • Various medical artefacts including glass eyes and field surgical instruments from the U.S. Civil War.
  • A first edition Encyclopædia Britannica, published in 1768.
  • A U.S. flag flown to the Moon and back on Apollo 11, the first human lunar landing.
  • A 1667 publication called Bills of Mortality that tracked numbers and causes of death in London during the time of the Great Plague.
  • A 1699 atlas containing the first maps to show the sun, not the earth, as the center of the known universe. (“This map, by far the most important map in history, divides the Age of Faith from the Age of Reason,” says Jay.)
  • Anatomical illustrations produced from 1805-1813 by Italian artist and physician Paolo Mascagni, who used a scalpel and iodine to document human systems in hand-painted, life-sized illustrations.
  • The first published illustration of amputation, from a 1532 German book of military field surgery. This hand-painted copy is stained with human blood on the cover.
  • A military field surgical kit, circa 1900, including saws, clamps, and tools in a portable wooden box.
unfortunately the library is not open to the public, although “invited guests to the Walker Library range from schoolchildren to business leaders, government officials and scholars, as well as librarians from around the world”, but you can take a video tour here and learn more about the library here, would I like a library like this? you bet!

 


 

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