The Historical Auction Series No.2 The H. Bradley Martin Sale 1989-1990

A great book, an incredible association copy.

Streitfeld goes on to interview and quote from various sources, including some who believe that it would have been against Mr. Martin’s wishes to sell and/or divide his library and some who simply bemoan the fate. “It’s very sad, and it’s a real loss for art historians, ornithologists, historians, and other scholars,” says Carole Slatkin of the New-York Historical Society. The key complainant seems to have been a Miss Gillian Kyles, who acted for nearly four years as Martin’s private librarian for the ornithology collection. So upset was she by the planned sale that she took the step of writing to the executors of the Martin estate, arguing vociferously against the planned sale. “The patrician nowadays – the so-called patricians – seems to be behaving like their yuppie counterparts,” says Kyles. “They aren’t safeguarding the future, which is what the rich did in the past.” To quote Streitfeld again, “Solidly in Klyes’s corner is [Stephen] Massey, the Christie’s rare book expert and a longtime luncheon companion of Martin’s. ‘It’s incorrect to break up the Selby drawings and sell them in this fashion,’ he says. ‘I would go back to Mr. Martin’s stand – he didn’t break them up in his time, why should they be broken up when he’s gone?’”

From this seemingly logical argument, however, Streitfeld goes directly to Martin’s will, which seems to provide incontrovertible evidence to the contrary about his intentions as it makes no specific provisions against dividing or selling any part or parts of his library or collection. Martin’s lawyer John Shroyer is quoted as having advised Mr. Martin that lacking a specific protective provision for the book collection, it would be passed as a general asset to the estate to be sold, and he describes Martin as understanding and assenting to this situation. There are two final quotes worth repeating here on this topic. One is from John R.B. Brett-Smith, “an old friend of Martin’s and a fellow collector who [according to Streitfeld] strives for a balanced view. ‘If Bradley had wanted the thing kept together, he should have so specified it. It’s a very great pity that they’re not being kept together, but one can understand that Sotheby’s for commercial reasons and the executors out of their duty to the estate really have no choice.’” The last word on the subject is eloquently stated by Streitfeld himself:
Martin may have been prey to an occupational hazard among book collectors. He apparently had talks with various institutions about donating certain items, but nothing was ever finalized. He couldn’t force himself to make a decision about his collection, friends and associates have suggested, because he couldn’t bear the thought of parting with any of it.

In the end, not making a decision was a decision. [Streitfeld, ibid.]
In terms of how the Martin sale did, it was as, if not more, monumental than had been expected, with the yield for almost all of its parts far exceeding even optimistic expectations. Sotheby’s had modestly estimated that the collective sales would bring in approximately $30 million dollars. The actual yield for the cumulative sales was an astounding $35,719,750. Further, no one sale did shabbily: Part I (Audubon) yielded $4,308,700; Part II (Ornithology) yielded $5,778,300; Part III (Selby), $1,568,600; Part IV (French Lit.), $1,717,100; Part V (Ornithology), $2,019,600; Part VI (American & Children’s Lit.), $3,538,700; Part VII (Americana), $4,394,775; Part VIII (English Lit.), $6,299,700; and Part IX (Illuminated Manuscripts, etc.), $6,094,275.