Lot of amazing and early Frank Sinatra artifacts consists of his 1934 driver’s license, a handwritten 1936 letter from Frank to the New Jersey Motor Vehicles Department and a letter to the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles from a lawyer regarding a judgment against Sinatra. The license (2x4.5”) gives a Hoboken address, where he was born and raised, and the very house he eventually bought for his parents. The letter (7x10.5") from Frank is on his stationery “Frank Sinatra Hoboken” and has great content mentioning the Major Bowes' Amateur Troop which was the traveling vaudeville group he joined after winning the competition of 1935. That was his first big break and the beginning of his career. He wrote the letter when he was a skinny, 19-year-old kid. He said because he was traveling with the troop he didn’t need a license in 1935 and 1936. The driver’s license shows wear, staples, little holes and some creasing. The handwritten letter has a piece missing, some little holes and a stain. The “Kolakowski vs Sinatra” letter (8.5x11”) dated March 1940 is a request to the Commissioner of NJ Motor Vehicles to revoke Frank Sinatra’s driver’s license and is EX.