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Gene S. Albert, Jr. gained his passion for Christian history while a student at Liberty University, from which he graduated in 1975 and from its seminary in 1977. It was also at Liberty's Thomas Road Baptist Church that Gene accepted Christ as Saviour on September 29, 1971.

And now for the past 30 years Gene has collected rare Bibles, antiquarian books, famous Christian autographs, and original prints. Highlights of his collection include an original 1611 King James Version Bible, 1782 Aiken Bible (the first English Bible to be printed in America and the only Bible authorized by an Act of Congress), an ordination certificate signed by Martin Luther, an entire book and several sermons written by Charles H. Spurgeon, autographed letters by Billy Sunday, D.L. Moody, Ira Sankey, George Muller, John Wesley, and a document signed by John Calvin.

In January 2004, Gene announced that he would donate $20,000 in historical biblical art to Liberty University. "As a church history aficianado, I am very excited..." Chancellor Dr. Jerry Falwell said of the donation. "I have in my office a framed original letter signed by Charles H. Spurgeon that Gene gave to me. It is a great conversation piece. His newest donation to Liberty will give throngs of students the privilege of viewing some significant historic biblical documents that they may otherwise not have the facility to see."

Gene has used his entrepreneurial spirit to develop a company that utilizes state-of-the art technology to make reproductions from original antique prints--including hand-colored Christian prints and engravings, old Holy Land maps, Bible scenes, antique Scripture calligraphy and famous religious paintings. Showcasing more than 100 Heroes of the Faith such as Martin Luther, John Wesley, D.L. Moody and Fanny Crosby, these framed reproductions include engraved brass plaques and a showcased signature.

Framed original leaves from rare and historic Bibles (the Geneva Bible, an Early German Bible, The Bishop's Bible, the Gun-Wad Bible of 1776, an Early Latin Bible, the Great Bible, the Eliot Indian Bible, the 1611 King James Bible, and many others) come framed with brass engraved plaques and certificates of authenticity.

Our mission is to provide quality Christian art for the home, office, school, and church. Readers may visit any of our websites below or call the company's toll-free number (877-313-9002) for more information on this momentous collection. Gene has also built a successful, multi-faceted real estate business in his hometown of Hagerstown, Maryland. The business encompasses land development, new home construction, and real estate investments. His company has sold more than 1,000 building lots and over 400 new homes.



Gene S. Albert, Jr., Dr. John Maxwell & Norman C. Conrad
Atlanta 2003

Dr. Ken Ham and Gene S. Albert Jr.
Christian Heritage Museum
May 2009

By David Dishneau
From the Washington Times
-------------------------------------


Gene S. Albert Jr., displays an 18th century hand scribed Torah at his Christian Heritage Museum Tuesday, July 18, 2006, in Hagerstown, Md. The Torah, one of 20,000 rare Bibles and religious documents in his collection, is on display at the museum

HAGERSTOWN, Md. -- The antique Bible market is hot. But if you haven't got the money to buy a first-edition King James Version, you still can get your hands on one at the Christian Heritage Museum, where the owner invites visitors to touch and purchase some of the 20,000 pieces in his collection.

Gene S. Albert Jr. isn't selling his prized King James first edition, first issue, printed in 1611. The book, also known as a "he" Bible for a masculine pronoun in Ruth 3:15 that was changed to "she" in later versions, sits atop a bookcase in the loft of the climate-controlled barn near Hagerstown that houses his museum.

But Mr. Albert, who's been collecting for 25 years, has other rarities for sale at www.christianheritagemuseum.com. They include a single page of a 1454 Gutenberg Bible priced at $20,000; a 1685 second edition of John Eliot's Algonquin Indian Bible, the first Bible printed in America, for $175,000; and two handwritten sermon notes by 19th-century English evangelist Charles H. Spurgeon, marked down from $595 to $275 each.

Collecting and displaying such pieces is a passion for Mr. Albert, 54, a home builder, religious printmaker and graduate of Liberty Theological Seminary at Liberty University, the Baptist school in Lynchburg, Va., founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell.

Welcoming a recent visitor to his museum, open free to the public by appointment, Mr. Albert picked up the King James first edition and encouraged his guest to touch a slightly yellowed page, its ornate letters and decorations still clearly legible after 395 years. The paper felt stiff and a little rough, like the cotton rags from which it was made.

Some might think that the owner of a such a rare book, easily worth $100,000, would balk at letting strangers handle it. Not Mr. Albert.

"We happen to believe that these were made and meant to be seen, and that's why we put them out for the general public," he said.

Liana Lupas, curator of the Scripture collection at the American Bible Society in New York, shares Mr. Albert's desire to grant visitors up-close experiences with historic volumes such as the society's three King James first editions.

"I want my books to be seen and appreciated," Mrs. Lupas said. But, "if you let everybody just rifle through it, it's going to be damaged."

So, Mrs. Lupas said, scholars are the only visitors allowed to touch the rarest pieces in the society's collection of 55,000 Bibles, Bible fragments and related documents.

"There's some sort of delicate balance you want to achieve somehow," she said.

In the marketplace, the balance favors sellers. Mrs. Lupas said the insured value of the society's collection has quadrupled over the past 12 years. Robert Hodgson, dean of the society's Nida Institute of Biblical Scholarship, said the collection is worth more than $12 million.

Mr. Hodgson said rare Bibles are considered good investments because of their historic value and fragility.

"Everything from mold, heat, humidity and insects attacks them," he said. "The rare Bible is an endangered species."

Demand has grown with the Internet, said David C. Lachman, an antiquarian book dealer in Philadelphia who specializes in theological works and Bibles.

"Things are going for much more money than they used to, as people understand the books are available," he said. "A lot of people just sort of imagined that books of this sort could only be found in museums of one sort or another and didn't understand that there are enough copies out there that they can actually be bought and sold."

Mr. Lachman said demand is particularly strong for pre-1800 Indian Bibles -- written like the Eliot Bible in phonetic languages invented by missionaries -- and for individual pages, or leaves, of antique Bibles.

"People who can't afford a whole Bible think it's nice to have a leaf to frame and hang on a wall," Mr. Lachman said.

Mr. Hodgson said some unscrupulous dealers deliberately destroy antique Bibles because they can sell the leaves for more than the book.

But Mr. Albert, whose Web site offers scores of Bible leaves, said the pages come from fragmented or damaged volumes that are sometimes included in the large lots of old books he buys at auctions.

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