This is new information discovered since the publication of Spizer's books. These test run covers were numbered from "001" to "100," and only one of each number of these three-digit covers was printed. Conversely, multiple copies of "A0000001" numbered covers exist (printed by Queens Litho in New York), as extra covers numbered as “A0000001” were made by a Queens Litho employee to be given away as souvenirs. Some have estimated that maybe a dozen of those were printed.
After the initial three-digit test run, Capitol Records allocated different blocks of numbers to Queens Litho, Bert-Co in Los Angeles and Gugler Litho in Milwaukee for the printing of the cover slicks, which were then sent to fabricators for assembly of the covers and inserts, which were then sent to Capitol to add the two records for mass distribution. These covers had seven digits and some added a prefix as well.
In the late 1980s, Rockaway sold two still sealed White Albums that were numbered as "064" & "065". Before then, three-digit versions were not known to exist! Since then, of the one hundred three-digit covers that were made, only about ten have ever surfaced. The lowest of these is numbered "007".
What we have here is a truly unbelievable set that took a passionate midwest collector over 40 years to assemble. Sadly, that Beatles collector passed away earlier this year. Although he was a serious collector of Beatles and other artists as well, he had the world's finest collection of White Albums (many low numbers), which was his all-time favorite album.
This set of three we are offering not only includes the lowest number to ever surface in the US three-digit series ("007"), but it is mostly likely the lowest sequentially numbered set ever offered anywhere in the world!
Low numbered White Albums from the US and UK are extremely collectable, with numbers less than 100 selling for tens of thousands of dollars each. Numbers less than 10 are virtually unheard of, with an extreme example being Ringo Starr's personal UK mono pressing "No. 0000001", which sold in 2015 for almost $800,000.
Condition Report: Since these albums are unique and irreplaceable, the condition of the covers is almost immaterial. However, for full disclosure, here are the details.