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We would never sell it, but i was wondering about how much that would be worth.

2007-01-03 03:36:01 · 5 answers · asked by Hannah's Mom 2 in Arts & Humanities History

It was taken by his father, before the flight i think... he used to have pictures of the bombs but when he died his second wife would not give them back, no telling how much she got for them

2007-01-03 05:09:26 · update #1

5 answers

That would be totally dependent on who was willing to buy it. You might get a couple of thousand of dollars for it from someone desperate to have such an artifact, perhaps a museum. You might not even get $5 for it, though. That is not exactly a common collectible, though there are definitely some people out there who would like something like that. It would also depend on its condition. Sorry this is not any real help, but I doubt you'll get an accurate assessment unless someone comes on here that actually wants it!

2007-01-03 03:40:16 · answer #1 · answered by Mr. Taco 7 · 0 0

Before the flight? Got a date? Do you know who took it?
Official; Army or not? The folks at Wright-Patterson likely have it if it's offical and it would be not a big deal. But if taken by another, depends on if it is pre or post flight in some aspects. Trust me the same 50? photos are all we ever see in print and many are from frames off a movie camera.

If you ever scan it for ID purposes be careful as it will lose all value to many. My last Tinian B-29 pilot friend has passed on
so no real access to anyone now.

Yahoo or Google images and you will get many, many, but one never knows what a expert might see. But I doubt it has anything but a value to family but one never knows.

2007-01-03 04:07:00 · answer #2 · answered by cruisingyeti 5 · 2 0

which would be something to work out, while i grew to become into interior the army i grew to become into deployed to Tinian for wargames. I have been given to work out the bomb pits that have been dug to place the atomic bombs in so the B-29's ought to taxi over ultimate and get the bomb loaded. they are the two grew to become into memorial gardens now.

2016-11-26 00:43:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Since you aren't selling it, it is priceless.

Objectively, you might want to refer to a musuem for prices, or auction it just to check out the price it can fetch.
Depends on the quality and size too.

2007-01-03 03:50:02 · answer #4 · answered by lkraie 5 · 0 0

Its priceless, that's something we can talk to our childrens about.
Keep it!

2007-01-03 04:52:54 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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