Lifelong Doctor Who collection goes under hammer

Tom MacDougalland
Molly Smith,North East and Cumbria
News imageMolly Smith/BBC Fred Wyrley-Birch, a man with dark hair and spectacles, wearing a suit and tie, stands in front of a series of tables bearing boxed toys. He is smiling at the camera.Molly Smith/BBC
"You can enjoy almost a museum of Doctor Who," said auctioneer Wryley-Birch.

One man's lifelong collection of Doctor Who memorabilia, including original artwork and a model car from the 1970s, is set to go under the hammer.

The extensive collection belonged to former Workington AFC chairman Dale Brotherton, from west Cumbria, who died in 2024 and worked on the long-running BBC show when he was younger.

The items, which were on display at Anderson and Garland auction house in Newcastle on Monday, is open for bidding from 10:00 BST on Wednesday.

Auctioneer Fred Wyrley-Birch described the single-owner trove of memorabilia as "almost a museum of Doctor Who": "It is a fantastic plethora of toys, gadgets, pictures, and props - it's a wonderful collection."

News imageMolly Smith/BBC The replica Dalek - one of Doctor Who's most memorable villains.Molly Smith/BBC
The collection includes a full-size replica Dalek

The collection includes a full-size replica Dalek, a rare Dalek gun, and a set of character jugs featuring seven of the Doctors, alongside "just about every magazine ever published about Doctor Who," Wyrley-Birch said.

The ephemera is particularly focused on the period covering Jon Pertwee's turn as The Third Doctor through to Sylvester McCoy's tenure as The Seventh Doctor, between approximately 1970 to 1989.

News imageMolly Smith/BBC A collection of Doctor Who toys laid out on a table with a royal blue surface. Everything is in its own box: the toys include a number of different sonic screwdrivers, a mini talking dalek and a mini tardis.Molly Smith/BBC
Brotherton amassed a collection of Doctor Who toys from across the eras

Star of the auction is arguably Bessie, the yellow Edwardian-style car driven by Pertwee, which was recreated by Brotherton.

Estimated to fetch up to £6,000, the Siva Edwardian Tourer kit car carries the registration plate 'WHO 244' and is registered with the DVLA, so - in theory - legal to drive.

Wyrley-Birch said Pertwee wrote a letter to Brotherton, saying the replica was "better" than the original, now in the National Motor Museum in Beaulieu. Correspondence from Pertwee accompanies the lot.

Other valuable pieces in the collection include original concept art created for the show, with individual pieces expected to sell for "a few hundred or a few thousand", the auctioneer said.

News imageMolly Smith/BBC Two pieces of artwork. One is a sketch-style drawing possibly of a promotional poster, with character portraits positioned around the Tardis. The other artwork is in colour and features a scarf-clad Tom Baker as the doctor, alongside one of his many nemesis.Molly Smith/BBC
Some original artworks are expected to fetch hundreds of pounds

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