The most valuable single-day Americana sale ever staged drops Jan. 24, pairing bloody battle flags with the ink that birthed a nation—here’s what collectors are ready to pay and why the fireworks are just starting.
While the United States counts down to July 4, 2026, Christie’s New York is accelerating the party by 162 days. On January 24, the house will offer “We the People: America at 250,” a 64-lot time machine expected to hammer past $20 million and become the richest single-owner Americana auction in history.
What’s for Sale: The Three Titans
- 1776 New Hampshire Declaration broadside — the only surviving copy north of Massachusetts, est. $3–5 million
- Rufus King Constitutional draft — marked up five days before the final parchment, showing the living edits, est. $3–5 million
- Lincoln-signed Emancipation Proclamation — one of 48 survivor copies from the 1864 Philadelphia fair, est. $3–5 million
Together those three lots alone carry a low estimate of $9 million, but specialists predict spirited bidding could push the trio past $15 million.
Why These Estimates Could Double
Americana has entered a bull cycle. The last Dunlap Declaration to hit auction sold for $4.9 million in 2021 against a $1–$2 M estimate, and the Magna Carta precedent shows political charters can climb to $21 million. Add global ultra-high-net-worth buyers seeking inflation hedges and Friday’s sale becomes a perfect bidding storm.
Battlefield Blood: Custer’s Flag
While the founding documents grab headlines, the emotional wildcard is the only U.S. flag retrieved after the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn. Measuring 27 by 53 inches, the silk banner still shows gunpowder residue and Custer’s own regimental markings. Estimate: $2–4 million.
Art That Made America Look American
Paintings anchor the sale’s middle market:
- Gilbert Stuart’s George Washington — the likeness later adapted for the dollar bill, est. $500 K–$1 M
- Jamie Wyeth’s JFK at the 1960 Coliseum — pop-culture history on canvas, est. $200 K–$300 K
- Grant Wood’s envelope-back “American Gothic” sketch — the doodle that birthed an icon, est. $70 K–$100 K
Market Pulse: Who’s Bidding?
Christie’s phones are already warm. Sources list:
- A Texas tech founder eyeing the Declaration as the crown jewel for his new museum
- A Top-10 global hedge-fund name assembling a rotating Constitution exhibit for charter schools
- A European royal collector who views the Custer flag as the last obtainable artifact of the Indian Wars
Online pre-bidding has surpassed $6 million across 20 lots, a record level for an Americana preview.
Why It Matters Beyond the Price
“These objects are the DNA of American identity,” says historian Harold Holzer. “When a collector pays eight figures, they’re underwriting preservation—because museums rarely have the firepower to compete.” Expect every major institution from the Smithsonian to the new American Museum of the Revolution to court the eventual buyers for long-term loans.
Fast Facts
- Total low estimate: $18.7 million
- Total high estimate: $32 million
- Consignor: a single Midwest family trust formed in 1926
- Live auction: 20th-century saleroom, Rockefeller Center, Jan. 24, 2 p.m. ET
- Global livestream: Christie’s LIVE with real-time bidding in Hong Kong and London salerooms
Whether you’re a billionaire bidder or a history buff refreshing the live feed, Christie’s has turned America’s 250th into a high-stakes civics class—and the bell rings Friday.
Stay locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for next-day results, winning-bid analysis and the inside track on which founding document just reset the record books.