
It's the question all Antiques Roadshow fans want answered... did they sell their priceless heirloom? 10 owners of the series' most extraordinary items reveal what they did next - and one cashed in BI
Daily MailThe question Fiona Bruce is asked most about Antiques Roadshow is what happened next to the heirlooms featured on the show. Ship Anna carried more than 400 African slaves to the Caribbean under the aegis of this ‘Prince Jemmy’, whose name was probably adopted by the owner to make himself sound royal. ‘I was blown away,’ says expert Ronnie Archer Morgan, who said the figurines were of ‘staggering quality’ and believed they were carved by the Makonde people of Mozambique. ‘It puts you completely in touch with a well-known moment in history,’ says Roadshow expert Clive Stewart-Lockhart. ‘It now sits in the best possible place for it, as part of a special exhibition in the Glenn Miller Birthplace Museum in Iowa.’ A Beatles Tale These Beatles figurines were among the vintage items belonging to Tony Quinn What’s the item?
History of this topic

Antiques Roadshow guest astounded by true value of rare royal family heirloom
Daily Mail
Antiques Roadshow guest shocked by the value of his grisly family heirloom - but he believes selling the collection would be a 'travesty'
Daily Mail
Antiques Roadshow: The most expensive items ever on the BBC One show including Van Dyck Painting
Daily MailDiscover Related












































