Take a stroll down down Beals Street in Boston’s neighboring Brookline and you’ll come across the John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site, the childhood home of our 35th president whose acronymic moniker is all too familiar from Harvard University to Hyannisport. Unlike his Brookline homestead, a bevy of items connected to the slain president were sold at auction yesterday at downtown Boston’s Omni Parker House hotel.

Courtesy of New Hampshire’s RR Auction, hopefuls were welcome to bid on the likes of Lee Harvey Oswald’ — JFK’s assassin — wedding band, personal correspondences, eyeglasses, and the President’s shaving kit.

According to the Associated Press, Oswald’s wedding band “which has a small hammer and sickle — a traditional communist party symbol — engraved on the inside of the band, was won by a Texas buyer who wished to remain anonymous.” It sold for $108,000.

Similarly Oswald’s Marine Corps rifle score book was auctioned off for a cool $54,000.

Bidding for former possessions of the late President started as high as $500 for a necktie, $300 for a golf ball, and $200 for original photos. The entire catalog, along with descriptions and starting prices are available for viewing online here.

According to RR Auction’s website, the final results of the auction won’t be made available until later today.

The event took place just as the 50th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination looms over the horizon, on November 22, marking half a century since he was shot dead in a Dallas, TX motorcade winding through the city. Countless conspiracy theories ensued as to the identity of the perpetrator and whether or not it was even Oswald who pulled the trigger, but we may never know the true answer.