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Apple Computer Co. Check to Radio Shack Signed by Steve Jobs Expected to Fetch $25,000+ at Auction

Apple Computer Co. Check to Radio Shack Signed by Steve Jobs Expected to Fetch $25,000+ at Auction

A $4.01 Apple Computer Company check to Radio Shack, written and signed by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, is up for Auction this week and is expected to fetch more than $25,000.

The check was written by Jobs on July 23, 1976, and signed “Steven Jobs.”

A fascinating check related to one of the great unsung heroes of the early computer boom: RadioShack. The biggest tech innovations of the 20th century are all, in varying degrees, indebted to the Boston-based electronics store. Steve Wozniak, who spent hours roaming the aisles of RadioShack as a teenager, saved up enough money to purchase their pioneering TRS-80 Micro Computer System, which he used to build his notorious ‘blue box,’ an illegal device that could make free long-distance phone calls. The ‘blue box’ cemented the first business partnership between Wozniak and Jobs, a duo that managed to make and sell roughly 200 of the boxes for $150 each. Jobs later told his biographer that if it had not been for Wozniak’s blue boxes, ‘there wouldn’t have been an Apple.’ In other words: there wouldn’t have been an Apple if it had not been for RadioShack.

During this period in the summer of 1976, roughly four months after founding the Apple Computer Company, Jobs and Wozniak were hard at work building their first product. Though initially conceived as a kit to be soldered together by the end user—like most enthusiast computers of the era—the Apple-1 became a finished product at the behest of Paul Terrell, owner of The Byte Shop in Mountain View, California, one of the first personal computer stores in the world. Terrell offered to buy 50 of the computers—at a wholesale price of $500 a piece, to retail at $666.66—but only if they came fully assembled. With this request, Terrell aimed to elevate the computer from the domain of the hobbyist/enthusiast to the realm of the mainstream consumer. Wozniak later placed Terrell’s purchase order in perspective: ‘That was the biggest single episode in all of the company’s history. Nothing in subsequent years was so great and so unexpected.’

The address on the check is the answering service and mail drop-off point that Steve Jobs used while Apple was being run out of his parents’ garage.

At the time of this article, there have been 21 bids on the check, and the total is up to $22,444. The next bid will be $24,689. The auction ends on December 6.