When my
father-in-law, Jerry, moved to New Jersey three years ago he could only bring a
few personal belongings with him. He had
already been living in an apartment in El Paso, so he didn't have much in the
first place. But now he was moving into
an even smaller place in an assisted living facility, so he had to cut back
even more. When it came time to make the
tough choices, he made it clear that the “antiques” were at the top of the list
of items moving east.
Pop had
two pieces of furniture that he had inherited from his parents – a very large,
heavy sideboard and an ornate secretary with a flip down desk top, seemingly endless
drawers and compartments, and an intricate locking system that baffled us
(fortunately, it wasn't locked). They were
beautiful pieces, but they certainly showed their age – darkened by years of New
York City soot, dimmed by Texas desert dust and discolored by verdigris
accumulated over countless years in unknown places. Dirt and grime notwithstanding, the antiques
took prominent places in his new, 3 room suite – and they looked great.
As Pop’s
health declined, Jessica and I became more and more involved in his medical
care and financial decisions. He was a
simple man, so his finances, though perhaps a little unorthodox, were not overly
complex. One day, as we were discussing
his portfolio and what to do with it, I joked, “OK, Pop, where are you hiding
the secret treasure?” He gave me a wry
smile and pointed nonchalantly to the secretary. I said, “Oh great, with all of those drawers
we’ll never find it!” Pop just smiled.
Pop
died in 2011 after a courageous battle with Parkinson’s disease. As the executor of his estate, it was my job
to go through his papers. That meant I
had to tackle the drawers and compartments in the secretary. It wasn't a job I was looking forward to – not
only were there lots of drawers and compartments, but they were STUFFED with
papers. It took me several hours to get through
it all, but it turned out to be a fascinating trip through time. I found
lots of papers that could have been thrown away years ago, but I also found
some wonderful heirlooms: poetry and
letters from his mother; old
photographs; some college term papers he had written fifty years earlier; and
even a play he had crafted in his youth when he aspired to be an
actor/playwright. When my work was finished,
I turned my eyes to the heavens and said, “Well Pop, no cash, but some pretty
good treasure anyway.”
Jessica
inherited the secretary, and her sister Jackie inherited the sideboard. We decided to have the secretary cleaned and
restored right away, so we moved it straight from Pop’s suite to a wonderful furniture
restorer in our area. As soon as Bob
looked at it, he knew we had something special.
He called in reputable antique appraisers and restoration experts from the
Metropolitan Museum of Art to advise him on how the piece should be restored. We were stunned to learn that the secretary dates to
about 1650. Now, we knew it was old
because we have a picture of Pop’s grandfather standing in front of it in
Germany as a young man, but we didn't know it was that old. As it turns out, the secretary is a treasure
in and of itself!