RSL Auction presents Spectacular Stills: The Collections of Ralph Dye, Tom Kellogg and Tim Steckbeck
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RSL Auction presents Spectacular Stills: The Collections of Ralph Dye, Tom Kellogg and Tim Steckbeck
Cast-iron transportation gems: a Pickwick Nite Coach, with a smaller open-top double-decker bus. All images courtesy of RSL Auction Co.



WHITEHOUSE STATION, NJ.- Three top-notch collections with prestigious provenance headline RSL Auction’s Oct. 14-15 sale of still banks plus select clockwork, tin and cast-iron toys and mechanical banks. Titled “Spectacular Stills: The Collections of Ralph Dye, Tom Kellogg and Tim Steckbeck,” the approximately 1,000-lot auction jointly represents 110+ years of active collecting.

“The name value in this sale tells bidders everything they need to know,” said RSL partner Ray Haradin. “Most of the still banks were previously in the collection of Ralph Dye, a judge from McConnellsville, Ohio who was a founding member of the Still Bank Collectors Club of America. Ralph was a very advanced collector who entered the hobby in the 1960s. He always focused on early banks of extreme rarity, and to find the best examples, he traveled extensively and attended countless auctions.”

Before he passed away, Ralph Dye sold his banks to a fellow collector, who now has consigned 300 of the banks formerly owned by Dye – nearly the entire collection – to RSL.

The second of three featured collections in the October sale is a 200-lot assemblage of beautiful still banks consigned by Ohioan Tom Kellogg. “Tom is another collector who goes for rarity and has a fantastic eye for spotting it. He became interested in banks in the 1980s, and his collection is distinguished by its many exceptional architectural banks,” Haradin noted.

The name “Steckbeck” is considered royalty in the bank-collecting world. The third featured collection – the still banks of Tim Steckbeck of Scottsdale, Arizona – adds gilt-edged quality to the Oct. 14-15 auction triumvirate. Tim is the son of Stephen and Marilyn Steckbeck, whose mechanical bank collection made headlines around the world when it was auctioned in 2007. “While Steve was building his mechanical bank collection, Tim would go along with his father to auctions and shows. He quietly put together his own still bank collection, mostly during the 1980s and 90s,” Haradin said. “Now it’s Tim’s turn to showcase his great collection of around 100 stills, all of which are in exemplary condition.”

There are so many rare and unusual discoveries in the selection of banks with Dye provenance, it’s challenging to predict which will rise highest during the auction competition, but there is already interest in a pair of Rocking Chair banks. The standard version of the bank is estimated at $2,000-$3,000, but a previously unknown larger variation, which is believed to be the only one of its kind in existence, could reach $4,000-$6,000.

The Saturday session opens with one of Tim Steckbeck’s top prizes, a large, one-of-a-kind Saddle Horse on Wheeled Base. This rare equine beauty, which was chosen by Haradin and his business partners, Steven and Leon Weiss, to grace the cover of RSL’s auction catalog, was made by the revered Connecticut firm Ives, Blakeslee & Co. The bank has survived the test of time in pristine condition and is expected to make $25,000-$35,000 at auction.

Steckbeck’s collection was also the source of a beautifully polychrome-painted Ives Santa bank with removable Christmas tree. The perennial gift-giver clutches a variety of toys and boasts exquisite paint detail and highlights. It is entered with a $12,000-$18,000 estimate.

A rare Boston State House bank, while small in size, is very desirable to collectors. A pristine example of this wonderful bank, with provenance from the Tom Kellogg collection, is estimated at $14,000-$18,000.

Spelter banks, which have captured collectors’ attention in recent years, continue to increase in value. Of the grouping offered in RSL’s sale, a solid highlight is the standing Prussian Officer, estimated at $4,000-$6,000.

There are some extremely high-condition cast-iron mechanical banks waiting in the wings for collectors. One of the top-estimated mechanicals in the sale is the finest of all known examples of The National Bank. Painted white with blue and red trim, and with a bank teller visible through a front window, this coveted bank could pay off to the tune of $50,000-$70,000.

A superb US and Spain bank, which pits an American military cannon against a colorful Spanish ship, could sail into favorable bidding waters with its $40,000-$50,000 estimate.

An elusive Camera semi-mechanical bank depicting an old-fashioned model on tripod, could snap up a winning bid of $9,000-$12,000.

The parade of early American toys is led by one of only two known Ives articulated Horse and Rider pull toys. When in motion, the toy cleverly replicates the action of a jockey bobbing atop a galloping horse. Estimate: $20,000-$30,000.

Another iconic Ives toy is the clockwork tin “Hook Behind,” designed as a horse-drawn carriage with the figure of a seated woman inside and the figure of a boy hooked behind the vehicle. Marketed around 1880 with a retail price of $5, its auction estimate is $20,000-$30,000.

High-quality cast-iron automotive toys include a Pickwick Nite Coach bus of unusual size and styling, an open-top double-decker touring bus, and several cabs finished in appealing but seldom-seen color schemes.

The Friday, Oct. 14 session will begin at 12:00 noon Eastern Time, while the Saturday, Oct. 15 session will commence at 10 a.m. The preview will be held on Wednesday and Thursday, as well as prior to commencement on both auction sessions. A complimentary light lunch and beverages will be offered to auction guests, and a reception and dinner will be hosted by RSL at an Italian restaurant immediately following the Friday session.










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