I just got this press release (below): The guy whose collection it was (and 
 related museum) is new to me. Maybe others knew him.
 
Steve
 
 
THE  LIVING ESTATE OF BRADY C. JEFCOAT, ECLECTIC COLLECTOR OF VINTAGE MUSIC 
MACHINES  AND OTHER RARE ITEMS, WILL BE SOLD JUNE 18 & JUNE  24-25 
The  June 18 auction will be held at Winstead’s Auction Company in 
Yanceyville, North  Carolina 
The  June 24-25 sale will be conducted on-site, at Mr. Jefcoat's home in 
Raleigh,  North Carolina 
(YANCEYVILLE, N.C.) – Hundreds of rare and prized items from the living  
estate of Brady C. Jefcoat – a collector so dedicated and renowned a museum  
bearing his name exists in Murfreesboro, N.C. – will be held on Saturday, 
June  18, in the showroom of Winstead’s Auction Company, then again June 24-25 
in an  on-site auction at the Jefcoat residence in Raleigh, N.C. 
Mr. Jefcoat, 95, began his collection in earnest in 1972 following the  
death of his wife. It has since become famous throughout the region. His main  
passion is music machines, to include rare and vintage phonographs (many 
with  horns), Regina disc players and players by other makers, jukeboxes, 
Victrolas,  cylinder boxes, organs, band boxes, coin-operated items, Black 
Forest 
cuckoo  clocks, hanging oil lamps and many other items in a variety of 
collecting  genres. 
“This collection is an auctioneer’s dream,” remarked Catherine Winstead  
of Winstead’s Auction Company. “I was fortunate to have been chosen to 
handle  his estate. Sotheby’s came and looked at what he had, and he was also 
courted by  many other big auction houses from far away. But in the end he 
decided to keep  it local. It all happened very quickly. I’m still  reeling.” 
Almost anyone would be. The June 18 sale will feature around 500  
museum-quality lots from Mr. Jefcoat's personal collection. Also sold will be  
duplicate items from The Brady C. Jefcoat Museum (still open and operational).  
There will still be enough merchandise left from that auction for the June 
24-25  on-site event – an estimated 800-1,000 lots. 
For people planning to attend the June 18 sale, Winstead’s Auction  Company 
is located at 201 Main Street in Yanceyville, N.C., near the Virginia  
state line, about an hour north of Raleigh and 45 minutes east of Greensboro,  
off Highways 86 and 158. There will be no Internet bidding, but phone and  
absentee bids will be accepted. To view the many items to be sold, visit 
_www.winsteadsauction.com_ (http://www.winsteadsauction.com/) . 
The name Edison is synonymous with vintage music-playing machines, and  
this auction will feature many examples. These include an Edison Bell  
Electrotone German Excelsior reproducer/talking machine with cupids on all 
sides  
and a huge horn; a rare Class M battery-operated phonograph; and an Edison  
Triumph #66907 with Cygnet horn and original gold paint. 
Other phonographs will include an oak case Edison Model M spring-model  
reproducer with 5-inch Mandrel, oak Cygnet horn and Music Master label (plus 
tag  from Theo F. Bentel & Co.); an Edison Model A Oxidized Bronze reproducer  
(serial #4484), type SM, with 21-inch mahogany Cygnet horn; and an Edison 
Model  B reproducer with two- and four-minute gearing. 
Regina is another name coveted by collectors. This sale will include an  
upright coin-op 27-inch Regina Corona disc player with the original finish,  
automatic changer, double comb box and 12 discs; a coin-op oak Regina 27-inch 
 disc player with fancy carvings, 12 automatic changer; an oak coin-op 
bow-front  Regina 12-disc changer; and a rare coin-op oak upright Regina 
Hexaphone with six  interchangeable cylinders. 
Two items are certain to get paddles wagging. The first is an oak carved  
German-made grandfather clock with a built-in Schultz-Marke 12-inch disc 
player.  The other is an oak hall tree with weight-driven clock, beveled 
mirrors,  swinging pendulum and beveled glass. Also sold will be an RCA Victor “
Nipper”  the mascot dog (3 feet tall) with a speaker in his belly. 
Jukeboxes will be served up in abundance. Examples include a totally  
restored Wurlitzer Model 750 jukebox; a 24-selection 1948 Wurlitzer Model 1100  
jukebox; a coin-op Ristaucrat Model 45-S table jukebox that plays 45 rpm  
records, 16 ½ inches tall; and a circa 1950s Seeburg Model 200 Wall-o-Matic  
table jukebox. Also sold will be an automated Chicago Coins band  box. 
Also slated to cross the block will be a coin-op upright Symphonion  
musical automation disc player with three drawers, by Schultz-Marke; a coin-op  
Nicole Freres-Leipzip upright Polyphon disc player, with five 19 5/8-inch 
discs;  and a Modernola hand-painted Japanese black lacquer phonograph with 
lamp 
and  satin shade with tassles and original sales receipt from  1923. 
Rounding out the list of expected top lots will be a Swiss-made oak  
cylinder music box with carvings by Jacot & Sons (1885); a Stella  fancy-carved 
Jacot & Sons 17-inch disc music box with drawer and four discs;  a Symphonion 
double 12-inch disc music box by Schultz-Marke; an oak Capital  music box 
with seven cone-shaped discs, oak, with painted snow scene on the lid;  a 
Columbia oak case phonograph with nickel-plated morning glory-style 23-inch  
horn and tone arm; and an inlaid cylinder music box with bells (tambour, nine  
timbers and castagnettes) by Fabrique DeGeneve, with glass  cover. 
All of the items just described will be in the June 18 auction in  
Yanceyville. The June 24-25 auction will be held at Mr. Jefcoat’s residence, at 
 
6017 Donnybrook Road in Raleigh. The house and property will not be offered,  
just the merchandise inside. Items in Mr. Jefcoat’s home were still being  
inventoried at press time, but the variety and quality will be same as on June 
 18. 
The June 18 auction will begin promptly at 12:00 noon (EDT). Previews  will 
be held on Thursday, June 16, from 11-5; on Friday, June 17, from noon to  
6:30 p.m.; and on Saturday, June 18, the day of sale, from 9 a.m. to noon.  
Previews may also be arranged by appointment (please call 336-599-7508). 
Start  times for the June 24-25 auction will be 12:00 noon on Friday, June 24; 
and 9:30  a.m. on Saturday, June 25. Previews will be held on and before the 
auction  dates. 
Winstead’s Auction Company has over 25 years’ experience in the auction  
business. The firm has access to thousands of collectors and dealers and is 
able  to conduct auctions on-site or at its climate-controlled showroom 
facility.  Winstead’s is always accepting quality consignments for future 
sales. 
To consign  a single item, an estate or a collection, you may call them at 
(336) 599-7508 or  (336) 504-2807; or, you can send them an e-mail at 
_jww23@embarqmail.com_ (mailto:jw...@embarqmail.com) . 
To learn more about Winstead’s Auction Company and the upcoming June 18  
and June 24-25 living estate sale of Brady C. Jefcoat, please log on to 
_www.winsteadsauction.com_ (http://www.winsteadsauction.com/) .
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