The Bullet and Shell table at the 2018 weekend event in Dalton, Ga (Picket photos) |
The annual firearms, artifacts and relics show at the
Dalton Convention Center, 2211 Tony Ingle Parkway, takes place Saturday
and Sunday. During dealer move-in Friday, people can pay $50 for an “early
buyer” badge that gives them the first crack at many items. They can use the
pass through the weekend.
Show organizer Mike Kent, who has been producing Civil War
shows for 34 years, including 20 at Dalton, said nearly 200 vendors will set up
items on 450 tables.
“Standout displays of Confederate buckles by Dr. Bill Blackman, Kenny Copelin and Scott Riddle are always one of the top attractions at the show and Father Bob Miller, who is one of our guest speakers, will also have a display on religion during the war,” Kent (left) told the Picket.
Kent said all
Civil War shows have evolved over the years. What started out as mainly a
show for dug relics from the Civil War has developed into an all era,
militaria-type show with relics, artifacts, weapons and memorabilia from the
Revolutionary War up through World War ll.
“As Civil War
material becomes more difficult and expensive to acquire, collectors are
tending toward items from more recent eras such as WW ll, but the Dalton show
is still 80% to 90% Civil War related.” Kent also runs the larger Franklin
Civil War Show in Tennessee, held in December.
Beyond sales, relic
shows are a major place for sellers, museum curators, authors, collectors and
others to network.
While there is a fee to enter the Dalton hall, three lectures Saturday in Room 1-A on the first floor of the trade center are free and those interested do not need to enter the show to listen. The schedule:
11 a.m.: Anthony Hodges, head of the Tennessee Civil War Preservation Association, and Joe Trahan, president of the Georgia Battlefields Association, will discuss battlefield preservation.
Noon: Father Bob Miller, a Catholic priest and historian, speaks on “Religion is what makes soldiers brave: Seven reasons
why faith was important during the Civil War.”
1 p.m.: Historian and author Scott Sallee
lectures on Reconstruction following the Civil War, and its three phrases.
Civil War photo collector and expert David Wynn Vaughan of
Atlanta plans to attend Friday’s VIP session. “I (always) hope to find a nice Confederate image.”
Ronald S.
Coddington, author, historian and publisher of Military Images magazine, has previously set up shop at the Dalton show -- interacting
with patrons by scanning tintypes, ambrotype images and
cartes de visite for possible print and online galleries for this magazine,
getting story ideas and weighing in on a card’s value.
While he is unable to attend this year, Coddington said he
enjoys meeting the public.
“The passion and knowledge these caretakers have for
artifacts is inspiration. And the opportunity to be physically present to touch
the artifacts is not something you can get in the digital world -- at
least not yet.”
A prospective buyer checks out firearms in 2010 (Civil War Picket) |
Show hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on
Saturday and 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is $12 for adults;
children 12 and under are free. Friday’s VIP session ($50) is 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
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