Jack Brodersen Findlay, age 90, of Herbster, WI passed away peacefully Sunday, February 6, 2022, at St. Luke’s Hospice in Duluth, MN. He was born June 17, 1931, on a farm in Harlan, Iowa, the son of Forrest and Regina “Jennie” (Brodersen) Findlay.
Jack grew up on the family farm at the tail end of the Depression – during which, as he would later make sure to tell his grandchildren, he ate lard sandwiches. Harlan, Iowa is also where he graduated from high school, after which he pursued his passion for baseball. His father taught him the game by playing catch for hours after farm chores were finished. However, it was the true practice of throwing rocks at glass insulators on power lines while walking to and from school that trained his pitching arm. At 6’5”, Jack’s presence on the pitching mound was bolstered by his physics-defying knuckle ball and circle change-up. He pitched not only in the U.S. Air Force, but he also played semi-pro in the minor league farm systems for the Cubs and Cardinals, both before and after his military service. It has been said that Jack could pitch a blueberry through a battleship.
Jack served for four years in the USAF during the Korean War and was honorably discharged. After his military service, he attended Iowa State University where he received a bachelor’s degree in agricultural and mechanical engineering.
On October 11, 1972, he married Marie Jane Rondeau in Sioux Falls. Jack worked in sales throughout the agricultural machinery industry for over 30 years, supporting a region in the upper Midwest and Canada. He worked with Erickson and International Harvester, then joined Shank Power Products in 1973 and retired as their President in 1993. Jack was also licensed as a real estate agent and auctioneer.
He served on boards for both the South Shore School District and the Town of Clover, and he was a member of The American Legion, Herbster Business Association, Herbster Community Club, and the Wisconsin Auctioneers Association.
Jack was happiest spending time with his family during Christmas and Fourth of July gatherings at the house on Bark Point in Herbster, WI. He also enjoyed fishing, reading, playing cards, grilling, and watching all Wisconsin or Minnesota sports teams. Jack was a regular for breakfast at Pinecone Ole’s, and he spent his evenings enjoying the view of Lake Superior while sipping single-malt scotch or dry martinis and sometimes both.
Affectionately referring to him as “Big Jack,” Jack’s family will remember him for boat rides on Lake Superior, mowing walking paths through the woods of Bark Point, and reading hard copies of magazines from his faithful armchair. They remain grateful for the years they heard his familiar and hearty “‘Yello!” each time he answered the phone, as well as the customary “Dammit!” whenever Marie fed the Christmas pot roast to the dog under the dinner table.
Jack was steadfast, loving, hardworking and loyal: a salt-of-the-earth man who lived his 90 years well. He is loved, missed, and celebrated.
Jack is survived by his children, Jennifer (Sam) Heimlich, and John (Michelle) Findlay; stepsons Dierck (Melinda) Oosten and Dustin (Wendy) Oosten; daughters-in-law Catherine (Joel) Findlay and Margaret (Scott) Findlay; 15 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Jack was preceded in death by his parents; his sister, Betty Findlay (1991); his first wife, Donna Jean Petersen (Findlay, Mount) (1998), his second wife, Marie (2011); and sons Joel Findlay (2004) and Scott Findlay (2021).
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History of Auctioneering
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The most expensive Pokémon trading card sold at auction is the “Pikachu Illustrator” card, which sold for $900,000 (£662,634 / €794,648), on 23 February 2022.
The hologram trainer promo card was sold at Goldin Auctions. The rare card – one of only 40 copies known to exist – had a Near Mint 7 condition rating, and is popular with collectors due to it being designed by Atsuko Nishida (Japan), who is credited as the original creator of Pikachu. It was never originally sold and was only released as a prize in a 1998 illustration contest.
Offers started as low as $75,000 on 10 February before rising to the record-breaking fee. The previous record was also for a “Pikachu Illustrator” card.
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The most expensive Olympic memorabilia sold at auction is a gold medal won by sprinter Jesse Owen at the Berlin Olympics held in 1936. It was sold for the price of $1,466,574 (£942,553) to Ron Burkle (USA) during an online auction in California, USA, on 8 December 2013. Jesse Owens won 4 gold medals at the 1936 Olympics in the 100 metres, 200 metres, Long Jump and 4×100 relay. It is not known which particular discipline this medal was awarded for. The medal was sold by SCP Auctions on behalf of Elaine Plaines-Robinson, wife of entertainer Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Bill Robinson had been given the medal as a thank-you present by Owens after he helped the athlete find work in entertainment on his return from Germany. The buyer, Ron Burkle, is the co-owner of the Pittsburgh Penguins NHL franchise and also owns William Faulkner’s Nobel Prize for Literature. The medal holds historical significance as Owens, an African-American, won the medals with Adolf Hitler looking on. The Nazi leader had hoped the Olympic Games in Berlin would promote Ayran racial supremacy only to be frustrated by the performances of Owens and fellow African-American athletes.
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An evening auction of “Post-War and Contemporary Art” held by Christie’s of New York (USA) on 12 November 2014 raised a record art auction total of $852,887,000 (£598,244,000). The auction featured works by artists including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichenstein, Willem de Kooning and Jeff Koons. Two silkscreen-on-linen prints by Warhol – “Triple Elvis (Ferus Type)” and “Four Marlons” – alone made $81.9 m (£57.5 m) and $69.6 m (£48.8 m), respectively.
The evening “Post-War and Contemporary Art” sale was supplemented by a day sale on 13 November 2014, which raised a further $112 m (£78.5 m), bringing the overall figure for the sale to $964,806,000 (£676,748,000). In total, three pieces sold for over $50 m (£35 m), 23 pieces sold for more than $10 m (£7 m), and 69 pieces went under the hammer for in excess of $1 m (£0.7 m).
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A sale of Action Man and Star Wars figurines, along with accessories including playsets, costumes and vehicles, sold for a record £180,000 ($256,800) in an auction held by Vectis Auctions of Thornaby, Teeside, UK, on 27 May 2015. The collection was sold by retired toy sales rep Doug Carpenter, who had been allowed to keep the stock when manufacturer Palitoy ceased trading in the 1980s – it had been languishing in his garage ever since.
The hundreds of pieces auctioned included a Princess Leia doll, which sold for £3,600 ($5,136), and a rare Action Man judo outfit, which sold for £6,480 ($9,245). Even an empty cardboard box in which Star Wars figures had been packaged after production fetched £160 ($230).
Palitoy was a well-known toy brand in the 1980s. As well as Star Wars and Action Man, it produced the Care Bears, Mainline Model Railways and Tiny Tears dolls. Palitoy closed its manufacturing business in 1985.
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In 1948, just a decade after the first wholesale auto auction opened, C.B. Drake assembles auto auctioneers, and a small trade organization called the National Auto Auction Protection Association (NAAPA) was founded to nurture and safeguard this fledgling industry of about 340 auctions in the United States. Today, what is now the private, nonprofit National Auto Auction Association has grown from those early years into a large, dynamic and diverse group of professionals representing all segments of the vast remarketing community.
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J.M. “Martin” Rawls held the first wholesale auto auction
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In 1954 NAAPA changed its name to National Auto Auction Association (NAAA)
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Massart Auctioneers Inc., your Green Bay WI auctioneers, was founded in 1974 by Bob and Pat Massart. They purchased an old dairy building and converted it into an auction house facility where they conduct weekly online auctions. In 1995, they were joined by their son, Damien & in 2000 his wife Michelle joined the business. This second-generation, family-owned and operated business is dedicated to providing the best service to their customers and clients.
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The National Auctioneers Association Granted Tax Exempt Status in 1970
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