How would you like to own a ribbon cable once owned by Steve Jobs? Or how about a heat sink? What about his boyhood collection of bow ties?
These are just three of about 200 items associated with the Apple co-founder currently being auctioned online to celebrate Apple’s 50th anniversary.
Entitled “Steve Jobs & the Computer Revolution: The Apple 50th Anniversary Auction,” the collection of weird auction stuff is more interesting than usual. It includes Apple’s very first check, expected to go for a cool half million.
Steve Jobs memorabilia: Apple 50th anniversary auction
Photo: RR Auction
Over the years, several auctions have sold off early Apple or Steve Jobs memorabilia. But because Jobs famously refused to sign autographs (as he once spelled out in an autographed letter), the usual types of items that often get sold at auctions — autographed stuff — are rare. Most auctions of old Apple gear tend to peddle old Apple-1 computers. They’re coveted by collectors for their historical significance as Apple’s first product and their rarity — only 200 were ever made, and only about 80 still exist.
This latest auction, which runs online through January 29, contains far more personal Jobs memorabilia than usual.
It is being run by RR Auction, a Boston-based house known for rare documents and historical artifacts, such as a wristwatch that went to the moon ($1.625 million), Bonnie and Clyde’s guns ($500,000), and one of Johnny Ramone’s guitars ($937,500).
Previously, RR Auction sold an Apple-1 prototype used by Steve Jobs for $677,196, and Apple’s second check.
Among the 196 items currently for sale are 55 pieces of Apple marketing memorabilia, 35 old iPhones, iPods or iPads, a couple of Elon Musk items, and a first-generation iPhone jailbroken by famed hacker Geohot.
Apple’s first check

Photo: RR Auction
The top item in the 50th anniversary auction is likely a Wells Fargo check for $500 signed by Jobs and fellow Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. The auction house expects it to go for $500,000 or more.
The check is made out to an engineer who worked at Atari (as did Jobs and Wozniak for a while) as payment for laying out the first Apple-1 motherboard.
“What makes this check extraordinary is that it predates Apple’s partnership agreement,” said Bobby Livingston, executive vice president at RR Auction, in a statement. “It was written weeks earlier, at the exact moment Jobs convinced Wozniak to sell his calculator, open an account at Wells Fargo, and start building a company.”
So far, it’s attracted no bids.
Amusingly, the auction also includes the fledgling company’s first bank statement, which showed it rounding out the month with about $140 in the account.
Apple-1 prototype motherboard #0

Photo: RR Auction
The highest bid so far is for an early prototype Apple-1 motherboard, currently sitting at $50,000 with a single bid.
RR Auction describes it as the earliest known fiberglass Apple-1, a “pre-production board used to validate the Apple-1 design prior to commercial release, regarded by experts as ‘board number zero.’”
It should sell for more than $500,000, too.
Items saved by Steve Jobs’ stepbrother

Photo: RR Auction
The auction also features several items from the personal collection of Steve Jobs’ stepbrother, John Chovanec, the son of Jobs’ adoptive mother. After Jobs passed in 2011, Chovanec inherited items from the tech pioneer’s childhood home.
According to RR Auction, these items are “artifacts gifted directly by Jobs and preserved for decades within the family, offering an intimate view of his formative years.”
One eye-catching piece of Steve Jobs memorabilia is Jobs’ bedroom desk, which includes some assorted papers from Hewlett-Packard, Atari and Reed College. It currently sits at $5,500 (with two bids).

Photo: RR Auction
There are also 12 bow ties from Steve Jobs’ boyhood bedroom closet, a small collection of 8-track tapes featuring Jobs’ favorites Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, and an old Apple business card with a handwritten note to his dad: “Hi, I’m back.”

Photo: RR Auction
The auction runs through January 29. View the full catalog and register to bid at RR Auction.

Photo: RR Auction
