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Veteran Expediter
BBC News Dec 3 Last updated at 14:00 ET
An anonymous buyer has bid $506,500 for a first edition copy of the "Star-Spangled Banner" poem, whose words were adopted for the US national anthem.
It is the only first edition of the poem in private hands, and one of just 11 such manuscripts to exist, Christie's New York auction house said.
Francis Scott Key wrote a first draft of the poem in September 1814.
He was inspired after witnessing the defence of Baltimore's Fort McHenry against a British bombardment.
The poem was set to music and publisher Thomas Carr rushed the song to print. It was finally adopted as the US national anthem in 1931.
Christie's manuscript expert Chris Coover said that since the poem's publication it had "become in the intervening years an absolute true icon of American history and patriotism".
Mr Coover said of the manuscript: "I'm fortunate enough to have been here 30 years. It's the first time I've ever handled one and it's quite a thrill."
An anonymous buyer has bid $506,500 for a first edition copy of the "Star-Spangled Banner" poem, whose words were adopted for the US national anthem.
It is the only first edition of the poem in private hands, and one of just 11 such manuscripts to exist, Christie's New York auction house said.
Francis Scott Key wrote a first draft of the poem in September 1814.
He was inspired after witnessing the defence of Baltimore's Fort McHenry against a British bombardment.
The poem was set to music and publisher Thomas Carr rushed the song to print. It was finally adopted as the US national anthem in 1931.
Christie's manuscript expert Chris Coover said that since the poem's publication it had "become in the intervening years an absolute true icon of American history and patriotism".
Mr Coover said of the manuscript: "I'm fortunate enough to have been here 30 years. It's the first time I've ever handled one and it's quite a thrill."