RICHMOND — The owner of the largest trove of artifacts salvaged from the Titanic is putting up the vast collection for auction as a single lot in 2012, the 100th anniversary of the world’s most famous shipwreck.
More than 5,500 items including fine china, ship fittings and portions of hull that were recovered from the ocean liner have an estimated value of $189 million, according to Premier Exhibitions Inc., parent of RMS Titanic Inc. - the Titanic’s court-approved salvor. That value was based on a 2007 appraisal and does not include intellectual property gathered from a 2010 scientific expedition that mapped the wreck site.
The auction is scheduled for April 1 by Guernsey’s, a New York City auction house, according to documents that Premier Exhibitions Inc. filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Results of the auction won’t be announced until April 15, the date a century ago that the Titanic sank on its maiden voyage after striking an iceberg.
The auction is subject to approval by a federal judge in Virginia whose jurisdiction for years has given oversight to legal issues governing the salvage of the Titanic. The Titanic treasures were amassed during seven perilous trips to the wreck, which rests about 2 1/2 miles below the ocean surface in the North Atlantic.
A spokeswoman for the auction house and Premier Exhibitions have declined to discuss the auction with the Associated Press until a formal announcement in January.
The Titanic’s sinking claimed the lives of more than 1,500 of the 2,228 passengers and crew. An international team led by oceanographer Robert Ballard located the wreckage in 1985, about 400 miles off Newfoundland.
U.S. District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith, who has overseen the case from her Norfolk, Va., courtroom, has ruled that RMS Titanic has title to the artifacts and was entitled to full compensation for them. She has not determined how RMS Titanic will be compensated.
Judge Smith, a maritime jurist who has called the Titanic an “international treasure,” has approved covenants and conditions that the company previously worked out with the federal government, including a prohibition against selling the collection piecemeal.
The conditions, which accompanied a 2010 ruling, also require RMS to make the artifacts available “to present and future generations for public display and exhibition, historical review, scientific and scholarly research, and educational purposes.”
Atlanta-based Premier Exhibitions has been displaying the Titanic artifacts in exhibitions around the world. The items include personal belongings of passengers, such as perfume from a manufacturer who was traveling to New York to sell his samples.
RMS recovered artifacts from the shipwreck in expeditions in 1987, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2004.
In its SEC filing, Premier acknowledged that any future owner of the Titanic treasures must abide by the covenants and conditions.
In accordance with court’s conditions, “The Property will be sold as a complete collection and offered for sale as one lot,” Guernsey’s wrote in the SEC filing, which outlines the terms of the auction. The auction house’s commission is 8 percent of a successful bid.
In 2010, RMS Titanic collaborated with some of the world’s leading specialists in the most technologically advanced expedition to the Titanic, undertaking the first comprehensive mapping survey of the vessel with 3-D imagery from bow to stern.
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