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The obsessed fans of Coca-Cola

FORT KNOX OF POP Coke archivist Phil Mooney owns the largest Coke item collection on earth. The novelties trace the company's history over the past two centuries

NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , ATLANTA

Lee Leslie of Woodstock, Georgia, president of the Atlanta chapter of the Coca-Cola Collectors Club, shows off a salesman's sample cooler from the 1930s with its original leather carrying case.

PHOTO: NY TIMES

Lee Leslie was a Coca-Cola collector long before he lived in Atlanta.

So will he admit to moving here merely to be closer to Coke? No, but it certainly crossed his mind.

"It didn't hurt that Coca-Cola was down here," he said.

Leslie is part of the legion of Coke collectors around the world. Thanks to the Internet, more and more people are involved in swapping Coke goods. The auction site eBay, for instance, recently listed more than 14,000 items that mentioned Coca-Cola.

Thanks to the company's size and long history, Coke has one of the biggest collector groups of any corporation. While Coca-Cola itself doesn't sponsor collector activities, the company is more than willing to feed its fan base.

Coke now has 350 licensees internationally. They produce about 10,000 different Coke items a year, ranging from toy bears to lunch boxes.

The stuff dating from the 1800s and early 1900s is what hard-core collectors really want, however.

Coke archivist Phil Mooney has long tried to keep track of everything that gets produced with the company's approval. Mooney is probably the ultimate Coke collector, given that he is charged with maintaining a corporate archive.

While most collectors probe online sites, flea markets and antique shows for rare Coke items, Mooney guards the door to the best selection that exists.

His archive is deep in a basement at Coke's complex on North Avenue in Atlanta. A nondescript pair of doors marked "storage" hides an 743m2 room filled with everything from one-of-a-kind Coke paintings by Norman Rockwell to vintage Coke calendars.

Everything is in mint condition, or close to it. Much of it is rare. One 1908 calendar carries the slogan "Good to the last drop," a line used for a few years by Coke and later adopted by Maxwell House.

"It's just a collector's dream," said Leslie, who is president of the Atlanta chapter of the Coca-Cola Collectors Club.

The rarest Coke collectible, Mooney said, is the original prototype of the company's trademark glass bottle. The bottle -- actually fatter than the one that went into production -- is on display at Atlanta's World of Coca-Cola.

The archive also holds artifacts that people might never imagine. Mooney has about 20 pieces of Coca-Cola Gum, for example. The product was sold only from 1911 to 1920.

The gum is now quite rare, of course. A single stick sold for US$8,000 at auction several years ago, Mooney said, although that was an unusually high price.

Mooney isn't sure how the product tastes.

"I don't chew US$8,000 pieces of gum," he said.

Only in relatively recent times have prices reached such stunning levels, corresponding to the growing numbers within Coke's collecting community.

Thompson, a 65-year-old architect from Versailles, Kentucky, started collecting Coke paraphernalia in 1970, before collectors were organized into a club and when old items were easier to find.

One of his specialties is Coke gum.

"The second and third sticks I bought were in 1976," Thompson said, and he paid US$110 for one and US$90 for the other. "That was a record at the time."

While collectors would surely like to rummage through Coke's archive, the space isn't meant for visitors. Coke keeps its old materials mostly for research, and the space looks more like a warehouse than a museum.

Coke also doesn't sponsor the national collectors club, although the company provides assistance. Mooney sometimes serves as a guest speaker at club events.

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