Today's hottest collectible, as you can well understand, are items related to America's never-ending WHO'S ON FIRST presidential election. Like talk-show hosts, comedians and those making a living in the news business, antique collectors love hullabaloo.  In addition to rarity, age, condition, historical context, appeal and eye-catching graphics, controversy can be one of the biggest value determinants in political souvenirs.  For instance: A 1904 button picturing Teddy Roosevelt having lunch with black educator Booker T. Washington so outraged bigots it was printed in few numbers.  Today it's worth a hundreds.  Recalling the infamous 1948 Chicago Tribune Headline, "Dewey Defeats Truman" brings to mind a now sought-after button describing under-funded and underdog Truman's "whistle-stop" (campaigning on a budget from town to town by train) status: "Confidentially, I'm for Truman."  One the most valuable 1960 Kennedy/Nixon buttons reads: "Prostitutes Vote for Nixon or Kennedy ... We don't care who gets in!"  In 1976, an ex-Georgia farmer running against President Gerald Ford poked fun at his own image by providing walking sticks with a peanut handles to his supporters.  Those canes are more than that Carter nickname today: $100 plus.

Since the early 19th century, candidates and causes have been bolstered and bludgeoned by promotion and propaganda-especially in the form of today's most popular collecting category; political buttons.  Ferrotypes, the first generation of buttons, were made by inserting an office-seeker's photographic tintype into the brass frame of a small button that could be pinned or tied to a lapel.  An Abraham Lincoln example, and they do appear from time to time, can fetch over hundred dollars.  Mounted paper images protected by a thin coating of transparent celluloid (early plastic), were first patented in 1893 and made their political debut during the McKinley/Bryan elections in 1896 and 1900.  Buttons stamped out of lithographed (printed) tin came into wide use in 1920. 

Keep your eyes open for authentic examples of these political antiques:

Political Buttons

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