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The license plates that were on the limousine carrying President John F Kennedy when he was assassinated 52 years ago are going up for auction.

The plates, JetBlack which were once picked out of the garbage by the owner of retrofitting the car, are being offered by Heritage Auctions on Saturday in Dallas and the opening bid is $40,000.

The limo was reportedly sent for upgrades to a Cincinnati company after the assassination in November 1963, and the plates could have been lost forever if they had not been scooped up Willard Hess and stored for decades.

Despite being seen in countless images and videos from the day of the killing, the pieces of history are just now surfacing into the public eye and are expected to fetch more than six figures. 

 An auction house in Dallas is selling the license plates that were on John F Kennedy's limousine the day he was assassinated in 1963. Above, the plates and a note describing them

 An auction house in Dallas is selling the license plates that were on John F Kennedy's limousine the day he was assassinated in 1963. Above, the plates and a note describing them

Above, through the convertible windshield, Kennedy right after being fatally shot along Elm Street
The opening bid for the license plates, which some have called 'priceless' pieces of history

The opening bid for the license plates, which some have called 'priceless' pieces of history, is $40,000. Above, through the convertible windshield, Kennedy right after being fatally shot along Elm Street

The owner of Hess & Eisenhardt, Hess kept the plates between books on his bookshelf.

His daughter inherited them when her father died in 2000, and has kept them in a kitchen drawer in before offering them for auction almost 52 years after the death of Kennedy.

'My sons always wanted me to put them in a safe deposit box,' Jane Walker, 72, who still lives in Ohio, told She was in college at the time of the assassination and said that she remembered blood on the Lincoln Continental when it was taken in to her father's garage.

William Hess (pictured) took the license plate out of the trash when his company was working on the car in the aftermath of the assassination

William Hess (pictured) took the license plate out of the trash when his company was working on the car in the aftermath of the assassination

Hess kept the plates in his bookshelf and his daughter Jane put them in her kitchen drawer. Above, the car being retrofitted in Hess's garage

Hess kept the plates in his bookshelf and his daughter Jane put them in her kitchen drawer. Above, the car being retrofitted in Hess's garage

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