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A 19th century walnut floor-standing coin operated penny-in-the-slot polyphon, by Nicole Freres, the vertical mechanism playing 50cm discs, the architectural case with arched cresting carved with a shell, arched glazed door flanked by turned columns, turned feet, the base with fall front disc cabinet, 211cm high overall, 73cm wide, c.1890
Jack Fellows (B. 1941) "Space Shuttle Discovery" Signed lower Left. Original Oil on Masonite painting. Provenance: Collection of James A. Helzer (1946-2008), Founder of Unicover Corporation. This painting was originally published on the Republic of the Marshall Islands PresentationPak for the 1996 Space Shuttle Discovery $10 Commemorative Coin. The mission assigned to space shuttle Discovery on its first flight was one of the most demanding faced by any early shuttle. Commander Henry Hartsfield Jr., pilot Michael Coats and mission specialists Judith Resnik, Steven Hawley, Richard Mullane and Charles Walker were to deploy three separate satellites during their six-day mission. The satellites were the Satellite Business System SBS-D, the LEASAT 2 and TELSTAR. This mission was also designated to test the Office of Application and Space Technology solar wing that extended from the payload bay and carried various types of solar cells. The solar wing experiment gathered data concerning solar arrays to be used in building future large facilities such as a projected space station. Although Discovery's first launch had been delayed three times due to technical problems, once aloft it performed to the highest expectations. Image Size: 16.5 x 14 in. Overall Size: 18 x 16.5 in. Unframed. (B15350)
Jack Fellows (B. 1941) "Space Shuttle Endeavour" Signed lower right. Original Oil on Masonite painting. Provenance: Collection of James A. Helzer (1946-2008), Founder of Unicover Corporation. This painting was originally published on the Republic of the Marshall Islands PresentationPak for the 1996 Space Shuttle Endeavour $10 Commemorative Coin. The mission accomplished on space shuttle Endeavour's first flight resulted in several records and "firsts" for the shuttle program. Commander Daniel Brandenstein and pilot Kevin Chilton were assigned to transport mission specialists Pierre Thuot, Kathryn Thornton, Richard Hieb, Thomas Akers and Bruce Melnick into position to capture the malfunctioning satellite INTELSAT VI. The mission required three EVAs (extravehicular activities) before the four-ton communications satellite was successfully captured, refitted with a new perigee kick motor and re-released into orbit. Endeavour's initial flight witnessed a total of four separate EVAs, one involving three astronauts -- a "first." These EVAs combined for the longest spacewalk time ever logged on a single mission -- 25 hours and 27 minutes -- and required three rendezvous with an orbiting spacecraft. Two of these EVAs were the longest single spacewalks to date -- eight hours and 29 minutes, and seven hours and 45 minutes. Endeavour was also the first shuttle to utilize a drag-chute during landing. Image Size: 16.5 x 14 in. Overall Size: 18 x 16.5 in. Unframed. (B15338)
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