Age, Biography and Wiki

Ralph and Terry Kovel was born on 20 August, 1920. Discover Ralph and Terry Kovel's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 88 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 88 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 20 August, 1920
Birthday 20 August
Birthplace N/A
Date of death 28 August 2008
Died Place N/A
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 20 August. He is a member of famous with the age 88 years old group.

Ralph and Terry Kovel Height, Weight & Measurements

At 88 years old, Ralph and Terry Kovel height not available right now. We will update Ralph and Terry Kovel's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

Family
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Wife Not Available
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Ralph and Terry Kovel Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Ralph and Terry Kovel worth at the age of 88 years old? Ralph and Terry Kovel’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated Ralph and Terry Kovel's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

Ralph and Terry Kovel Social Network

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Timeline

1996

The Kovels have had an online presence since 1996. Kovels.com was created in 1998. It currently lists over a million actual prices for antiques and collectibles from the United States, Canada, and Europe, individually reviewed by experts. The website also offers news, identification information, readers’ questions with expert answers, a database of factory marks, pictures, and community features like forums, calendar of events, business directory with antique-related services and more. It also includes a weekly eNewsletter ("Kovels Komments"), and other free information, as well as the subscription print newsletter, a paid membership subscription to the website and other buying guides and publications from the Kovels. It now has hundreds of thousands of unique visitors each month.

1994

The Kovel newspaper column helped to find a missing inkwell needed for the United States Supreme Court in 1994.25

1979

1979–2000, "Ask the Experts," a monthly column in House Beautiful magazine 1995–2003, "Antiques and Collectibles" section for the Encyclopædia Britannica Yearbook 2000–2002, "The Kovels on Collecting,” a monthly column about antiques in Forbes magazine 1992–present, Many Buying Guides and Special Reports that include hard-to-find identification clues for collectors. Subjects have included jewelry, pottery, Handbags, woodblock prints, and more.

1974

The newsletter, “Kovels on Antiques and Collectibles,” was introduced in 1974. It is a 12-page subscription-only newsletter that had over 200,000 subscribers by the early 1990s. “Kovels On Antiques & Collectibles” newsletter now on its 48th year, and it's also available in print and as a PDF for Kovels.com members. The newsletter has kept up with the times both in technology and content. Photos went from black and white to color in 1996, but there are still reports of sales and auctions, lists of current prices, tips on care, news "hotlines," reports of fakes, and many comments on events and market trends by the Kovels.

1970

In 1970 Ralph started U.S. Brands, Inc., a fulfillment company that did packaging and handling for the Kovels books and newsletters as well as for many other businesses. He became part owner of an innovative aquaculture shrimp farm in the Bahamas in 1996. Ralph continued working until the week before his final illness. He died in August 2008.

1969

Ralph and Terry Kovel started appearing on television in 1969, when their shows were made on film with one camera and no editing. The first series of 10 half-hour shows with no commercial breaks was produced by WVIZ, the Cleveland public television station. Twenty-six shows were made by 1972 and distributed nationally. Since 1969, the Kovels emceed an annual televised auction to benefit WVIZ. Other TV series include:

1967

In 1967 The Kovels wrote Kovels' Know Your Antiques, an easy-to-read book for collectors filled with marks, dates, and helpful information. The next year they decided that an up-to-date book listing prices for antiques was needed. They used the newest technology, keypunch cards and that modern invention, the computer. The cards were punched, corrected, sorted by hand (there was no sorting machine), and printed on the white side of green bar paper used for accounting. The system used the only available typeface and no pictures. The white pages were reproduced to create the book, so the time to complete the book was speeded up by six months. It is said to be the first "bookstore" book done on a computer. The Complete Antiques Price List has been published every year for over sixty years with changes and improvements. The title is now Kovels' Antiques and Collectibles Price Guide. It has color photographs, paragraphs of information, marks, a computer-generated index, a listing of record prices for the past year, tips on care, and 40,000 prices for pieces sold in the previous 12 months. Over four million copies of the book have been sold since the first edition. Other books followed (see list below) and the Kovels 100th book was published in September 2011.

1953

Terry started her writing career with her husband, Ralph, in 1953 (see section Ralph and Terry Kovel). Terry was a reading specialist and mathematics teacher at Hawken School, Lyndhurst, Ohio, from 1961 to 1971. She took specialized courses, including "How to Teach New Math," at the University of Illinois, and studied American antiques at the Winterthur Museum Summer Institute.

In 1953 the Kovels started writing a question and answer column for ''The Cleveland Press''. It was syndicated in 1955 with Register and Tribune Syndicate and was soon running in 100 newspapers. When the Cleveland Press closed in 1982 the Cleveland Plain Dealer began to run the Kovels' column. "Kovels: Antiques and Collecting" is now (2021) the longest-running U.S. syndicated column written by the original bylined author. Today it is distributed by King Features Syndicate to over 120 newspapers nationwide and online. In October 2010, Ralph and Terry Kovel were inducted into the Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame.

1952

The first Kovel book was written in 1952–53. Ralph and Terry were living in an apartment with their young son, Lee (and with a breakfront full of their collection of English 18th-century porcelains). Their daughter, Kim, was born the day the first copy of Ralph and Terry's first book, Dictionary of Marks: Pottery and Porcelain arrived by mail. That book, now titled Kovels' Dictionary of Marks: Pottery and Porcelain, 1650–1850, is still in print. In 1986 they updated their information about marks with a new book, Kovels New Dictionary of Marks: Pottery and Porcelain, 1850 to the Present.

1950

Terry Kovel has been a volunteer since she was a teenager. She was a group leader for girls at East End Neighborhood House in the 1950s, an appraiser and advisor for many non-profit antique-related projects, and an auctioneer, appraiser, and go-getter at public television fundraisers. She has also been active in many civic gardening projects, both digging and helping with fundraisers. She has served on the Ohio Historic Preservation Committee and has been a board member of the Cleveland Chapter of the Council of Jewish Women, the Catholic DePaul Infant and Maternity Home, and Hiram College. She is now on the boards of WVIZ/PBS and 90.3 WCPN Ideastream and the Shaker Historical Society and is an honorary trustee of Hiram College, and Chairperson of Cleveland's Euclid Beach Park Carousel Society.

Roy Lichtenstein, the famous artist, hung Ralph and Terry's drapes in the 1950s, before he became famous. Ralph and Terry never bought any of his modern paintings.

1928

Terry was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1928. She earned a bachelor's degree from Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. In 1950 she married Ralph Kovel. Their children are Lee Kovel and Kim Kovel.

1920

Ralph Mallory Kovel (20 August 1920 – 28 August 2008) was an American author of 97 books and guides to antiques, co-authored with his wife, Terry Kovel (b. 1928). They wrote a nationally syndicated collectibles column that began in 1955, which is still in production as of 2022.

Ralph Kovel (/koʊˈvɛlˈ/) was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1920. His family moved to Paducah, Kentucky, then Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1930s. He graduated from Cleveland Heights High School, then attended Ohio State University. He joined the United States Coast Guard during World War II. In 1950 he married Terry Horvitz. Their children are Lee Kovel and Kim Kovel. He started his writing career with Terry in 1953 (see section Ralph and Terry Kovel). In the 1950s, he was in the export-import business and imported a variety of things, including the Lambretta motor scooter, the new bikini bathing suits European women were wearing, and specialty food products. He didn't like the constant travel, so he started his own business as a food broker, representing packaged foods and other products to grocery-store chains, and fast-food restaurants. He represented many of the new frozen food lines, like Stouffers, specialty items like Sweet and Low packets, and even live, bare-root fruit trees. Ralph sold McDonald's fresh potatoes in 1956 by the carload when hamburgers were 15 cents and the chain said they would never use frozen French fries. He bought a small salad dressing company in Cleveland named Sar-a-Lee and soon was selling custom-made dressings to major fast-food chains for their newly popular salad bars. In 1987 his company was purchased Sara Lee Corporation. and he became a senior vice president in the foods division.

1890

The Kovels over the years acquired an 18,000-volume library about antiques. They also have an 1890s "general store" collection in their basement. Ralph and Terry met on a double-blind date. He was the other girl's date. The Kovels' Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide was mentioned in newspaper reports as a research book used by a real thief in a murder and antiques theft case that made national news. It was also used by a thief in an Elmore Leonard murder mystery, Gold Coast, and in at least five other murder mysteries.