This article appeared in the January 24, 2022 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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Connecting with history at the flea market

Courtesy of Chelsey Brown
Chelsey Brown works to connect everyday historical items that she finds at thrift markets, like this baby album, with their original owners or owners' descendants.

We’ve all heard about the big find at an estate sale or flea market – like the artwork a Massachusetts resident bought for $30 five years ago that experts now say is likely an Albrecht Dürer drawing worth millions. 

But for Chelsey Brown, found treasure is something else entirely – as she discovered last year when an old, handwritten letter caught her eye at a New York City flea market, one of many she frequents for her budget interior design business. One dollar later, it was hers, along with a self-imposed challenge: Trace the name on the envelope. She quickly succeeded – transforming an everyday item into a delighted family’s priceless gem and giving herself a new mission.

“It would break my heart when I would be at the flea market ... and pass by a box of family mementos,” Ms. Brown explains via email. “I always knew they should be with their rightful family.”

Ms. Brown pores over genealogical databases and history books to identify the provenance of everything from baby albums to love lockets. She’s connected hundreds of items with owners’ descendants, footing the bill herself. One woman was dumbfounded to receive her grandfather’s World War II ration books. “It was like a present,” a thrilled Mary Jane Scott told The Washington Post. “We spent a lot of Christmases with my grandparents.”

Ms. Brown says such “over the moon” reactions are what keep her going: “These artifacts and heirlooms can tell us things about the past – the era, person, family dynamic, emotions – that documents and records cannot.”


This article appeared in the January 24, 2022 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 01/24 edition
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