I think that buying Titanic wood is akin to buying a piece of the Berlin Wall...in fact, I have a few pieces of Berlin Wall for sale...and don't let the fact that they look like pieces of my driveway dissuade you - it's a remarkable and utter coincidence!

I also have the lighter used to light Joan of Ark's pyre, the skeleton of the dove that Noah sent out (looks NOTHING like the remains of a KFC meal) and George Washington's wooden teeth...if you give me about ten minutes to play around on my computer...I mean 'find them', I can produce some certificates for them too! :wink:
I would tend to doubt the veracity of any historical wood that was not verified by a reputable organization willing to stake its reputation on its certification of the artifact as genuine - Smithsonian, British Museum, etc...
But then again, I am a history teacher (and English teacher) by trade, so I tend to be somewhat dubious by nature.
Andrew
BUT, to answer your question, if we toss the authenticity issue aside, I'd like:
- a piece of wood from the Roman pilum carried by Julius Caesar in Gaul
- a sliver from the structure Michelangelo used to paint the Sistine Chapel
- a piece of the spear used by the first person to cross the land-bridge from Asia into North America
- a piece of decking from Ferdinand Magellan's ship
- Bjarni Herjolufson's mast (first European to sight North America)
- a piece of the walls (mostly made of sod, but there was some wood) from Lanse aux Meadows
- Shaka Zulu's Iklawa (I think that's how it's spelled)
- heck, I could keep going all night! But I won't! :wink: