Bound in History: Rare Early National Geographics
Listing ID#: 852845

Sale Location
2500 Church St 2500 Church St
Norfolk, VA 23504
Sale Dates and Times
Bidding Starts: Monday Mar 16, 9:00 AM
Bidding Ends: Thursday Apr 2, 01:15 PM
Sale Type
 Online Auction (shipping available)  VIEW ONLINE CATALOG
Company Information
Blue Box Auction Gallery

Contact: Jim Weigl
Phone: 7575500285
Email: sold@blueboxauction.com
Website: www.blueboxauction.com

EstateSale.com ID#: 13741
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Listing Terms and Conditions
Please see our website for complete terms and conditions.
Listing Information

This auction presents an exceptional collection of early National Geographic Magazine issues spanning the foundational decades of the National Geographic Society, from its earliest publications of the 1890s through the mid-twentieth century. The collection represents a singular opportunity for serious collectors, institutions, and scholars to acquire original periodicals documenting the golden age of geographic exploration and scientific discovery.

Pre-Bidding is underway. Submitting a maximum bid today ensures your place is secure when online bidding closes this auction on April 2, 2026 at 1:15 PM ET.

Anchoring the Collection: Rare 1890s Originals

Among the most significant offerings are several issues from the Society's earliest years of publication, produced in press runs of fewer than 1,000 copies. These include Vol. II, No. 1 (April 1890) and Vol. II, No. 3 (July 1890), two of the first 36 issues ever published by the Society, both preserved in Very Good condition with original covers intact. Equally noteworthy are Vol. IV, No. 1 (March 1892) and Vol. IV, No. 4 (March 31, 1892), the latter retaining its original issued map — a survival of considerable rarity, as such cartographic inserts were frequently separated from their parent issues over time. Examples from this era are seldom encountered outside institutional collections and represent cornerstones of any serious National Geographic holding.

Issues Retaining Original Maps

A distinguishing feature of this collection is the presence of multiple issues accompanied by their original fold-out maps. These include Vol. IX, No. 6 (June 1898), the celebrated Philippines Number, and the highly collectible Vol. X, No. 6 (June 1899), which retains its original supplement map. Additional map-inclusive issues span the 1896–1903 period, including several Vol. VII issues from 1896 and Vol. XIV, No. 2 (February 1903). Given that such inserts were routinely removed or lost, their continued presence substantially enhances both the historical integrity and market value of each lot.

Comprehensive Holdings Across Six Decades

Beyond the anchor pieces, the collection encompasses complete or near-complete year runs from 1896 through 1915, individual issues from 1900 through 1912 with detailed scholarly content, original brown leather-bound volumes spanning Vol. 5 (1893) through Vol. 176 (1989), and eleven separate lots of approximately 100 vintage National Geographic Society maps each, originally issued as fold-out supplements and preserved in protective sleeves.

Significance

Early National Geographic issues of this caliber — particularly those from before 1900 and those retaining original cartographic materials — are increasingly difficult to source in open-market settings. This collection, offered across individual lots and multi-volume sets, presents a rare opportunity to acquire primary documents from one of the most consequential scientific and geographic publishing enterprises in American history.

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Bound in History: Rare Early National Geographics

Blue Box Auction Gallery

Blue Box Auction Gallery


Contact: Jim Weigl
Phone: 7575500285
Sale Location
2500 Church St 2500 Church St
Norfolk, VA 23504
Sale Dates and Times
Sale Terms and Conditions
Please see our website for complete terms and conditions.
Listing Details

This auction presents an exceptional collection of early National Geographic Magazine issues spanning the foundational decades of the National Geographic Society, from its earliest publications of the 1890s through the mid-twentieth century. The collection represents a singular opportunity for serious collectors, institutions, and scholars to acquire original periodicals documenting the golden age of geographic exploration and scientific discovery.

Pre-Bidding is underway. Submitting a maximum bid today ensures your place is secure when online bidding closes this auction on April 2, 2026 at 1:15 PM ET.

Anchoring the Collection: Rare 1890s Originals

Among the most significant offerings are several issues from the Society's earliest years of publication, produced in press runs of fewer than 1,000 copies. These include Vol. II, No. 1 (April 1890) and Vol. II, No. 3 (July 1890), two of the first 36 issues ever published by the Society, both preserved in Very Good condition with original covers intact. Equally noteworthy are Vol. IV, No. 1 (March 1892) and Vol. IV, No. 4 (March 31, 1892), the latter retaining its original issued map — a survival of considerable rarity, as such cartographic inserts were frequently separated from their parent issues over time. Examples from this era are seldom encountered outside institutional collections and represent cornerstones of any serious National Geographic holding.

Issues Retaining Original Maps

A distinguishing feature of this collection is the presence of multiple issues accompanied by their original fold-out maps. These include Vol. IX, No. 6 (June 1898), the celebrated Philippines Number, and the highly collectible Vol. X, No. 6 (June 1899), which retains its original supplement map. Additional map-inclusive issues span the 1896–1903 period, including several Vol. VII issues from 1896 and Vol. XIV, No. 2 (February 1903). Given that such inserts were routinely removed or lost, their continued presence substantially enhances both the historical integrity and market value of each lot.

Comprehensive Holdings Across Six Decades

Beyond the anchor pieces, the collection encompasses complete or near-complete year runs from 1896 through 1915, individual issues from 1900 through 1912 with detailed scholarly content, original brown leather-bound volumes spanning Vol. 5 (1893) through Vol. 176 (1989), and eleven separate lots of approximately 100 vintage National Geographic Society maps each, originally issued as fold-out supplements and preserved in protective sleeves.

Significance

Early National Geographic issues of this caliber — particularly those from before 1900 and those retaining original cartographic materials — are increasingly difficult to source in open-market settings. This collection, offered across individual lots and multi-volume sets, presents a rare opportunity to acquire primary documents from one of the most consequential scientific and geographic publishing enterprises in American history.

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Bound in History: Rare Early National Geographics
 Online Only Auction
Sale Date(s)
Bidding Starts: Monday Mar 16 , 9:00 AM
Bidding Ends: Thursday Apr 2 , 01:15 PM
Sale Location
2500 Church St 2500 Church St
Norfolk, VA 23504
Listing Terms and Conditions
Please see our website for complete terms and conditions.

This auction presents an exceptional collection of early National Geographic Magazine issues spanning the foundational decades of the National Geographic Society, from its earliest publications of the 1890s through the mid-twentieth century. The collection represents a singular opportunity for serious collectors, institutions, and scholars to acquire original periodicals documenting the golden age of geographic exploration and scientific discovery.

Pre-Bidding is underway. Submitting a maximum bid today ensures your place is secure when online bidding closes this auction on April 2, 2026 at 1:15 PM ET.

Anchoring the Collection: Rare 1890s Originals

Among the most significant offerings are several issues from the Society's earliest years of publication, produced in press runs of fewer than 1,000 copies. These include Vol. II, No. 1 (April 1890) and Vol. II, No. 3 (July 1890), two of the first 36 issues ever published by the Society, both preserved in Very Good condition with original covers intact. Equally noteworthy are Vol. IV, No. 1 (March 1892) and Vol. IV, No. 4 (March 31, 1892), the latter retaining its original issued map — a survival of considerable rarity, as such cartographic inserts were frequently separated from their parent issues over time. Examples from this era are seldom encountered outside institutional collections and represent cornerstones of any serious National Geographic holding.

Issues Retaining Original Maps

A distinguishing feature of this collection is the presence of multiple issues accompanied by their original fold-out maps. These include Vol. IX, No. 6 (June 1898), the celebrated Philippines Number, and the highly collectible Vol. X, No. 6 (June 1899), which retains its original supplement map. Additional map-inclusive issues span the 1896–1903 period, including several Vol. VII issues from 1896 and Vol. XIV, No. 2 (February 1903). Given that such inserts were routinely removed or lost, their continued presence substantially enhances both the historical integrity and market value of each lot.

Comprehensive Holdings Across Six Decades

Beyond the anchor pieces, the collection encompasses complete or near-complete year runs from 1896 through 1915, individual issues from 1900 through 1912 with detailed scholarly content, original brown leather-bound volumes spanning Vol. 5 (1893) through Vol. 176 (1989), and eleven separate lots of approximately 100 vintage National Geographic Society maps each, originally issued as fold-out supplements and preserved in protective sleeves.

Significance

Early National Geographic issues of this caliber — particularly those from before 1900 and those retaining original cartographic materials — are increasingly difficult to source in open-market settings. This collection, offered across individual lots and multi-volume sets, presents a rare opportunity to acquire primary documents from one of the most consequential scientific and geographic publishing enterprises in American history.