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A wheelchair owned by Professor Stephen Hawking. Photo: EPA

Stephen Hawking’s wheelchair and thesis sell for US$1 million

  • Money raised by the sale of the wheelchair will go to the Stephen Hawking Foundation and the Motor Neurone Disease Association
  • Hawking lived most of his life with motor neurone disease, before dying at the age of 76 in March

A motorised wheelchair used by the late British physicist Stephen Hawking sold at auction on Thursday for almost £300,000 (US$391,740.00) while a dissertation raised nearly twice that at a sale to raise money for charity.

Famed for his work exploring the origins of the universe, Hawking died in March at the age of 76 after spending most of his life confined to a wheelchair with motor neurone disease.

Some of his belongings including essays, medals, awards and a copy of his book a Brief History of Time signed with a thumbprint were sold online on Thursday alongside letters and manuscripts belonging to Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and Albert Einstein.

A gallery assistant with the book ‘A Brief History of Time’, signed with a thumbprint. Photo: Xinhua

Hawking’s 117-page dissertation “Properties of expanding universes” from 1965 sold for 584,750 pounds, well ahead of the estimate of up to 150,000.

Medals and awards sold for £296,750, compared with an estimate of £15,000, while the red motorised wheelchair sold for £296,750, also compared with an estimate of £15,000.

Auction house Christies ran the nine-day online auction called “On the Shoulders of Giants” to raise money for the Stephen Hawking Foundation and the Motor Neurone Disease Association.

It also offered fans of the physicist known for his electronic voice synthesiser a chance to buy some of his possessions.

“Stephen Hawking was a huge personality worldwide. He had this amazing ability to connect with people,” Thomas Venning, head of the Books and Manuscripts department at auction house Christie’s London, said ahead of the event.

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