Aired: 10/7/2012
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit an active air base at Marham in Norfolk.
Aired: 10/14/2012
Aired: 10/21/2012
Aired: 10/28/2012
Aired: 11/4/2012
Items include a carved tribute to a Spitfire pilot who was killed in action; and an early refrigerator.
Aired: 11/11/2011
Included: early designs for a flying machine; and the story of a sailor lost during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea.
Aired: 11/18/2011
Aired: 11/25/2011
Aired: 12/2/2012
Aired: 12/9/2012
Aired: 12/23/2012
Favorite finds of 2012; and some of the year's colorful guests. Included: a British flag captured by the Japanese during the fall of Singapore in World War II.
Aired: 12/30/2012
From Fountain's Abbey in North Yorkshire, experts appraise a 19th-century figurine of Robert Burns; a Swiss music box; a Chippendale cabinet; and the contents of a wine cellar.
Aired: 1/6/2013
Aired: 1/13/2013
The team head to Scotland for a busy day in the grounds of Cawdor Castle near Inverness.
Aired: 1/21/2013
The team discover rare treasures on a visit to Chatham's historic dockyards.
Aired: 3/24/2013
Aired: 3/31/2013
Aired: 4/7/2013
Fiona Bruce and the experts gather in a packed Cheltenham Town Hall as visitors arrive for another busy day of evaluations.
Aired: 4/14/2013
Fiona Bruce and the experts make a return visit to Cheltenham Town Hall. Featured family treasures include a valuable silver fruit bowl damaged when thrown in a domestic tiff, relics of Captain Scott's last expedition to the South Pole and a humble house brick with an important story.
Aired: 4/21/2013
A return visit to Castle Coole near Enniskillen in Northern Ireland. Fiona Bruce and the team of experts welcome visitors as they bring their family treasures for inspection.
Aired: 5/5/2013
Fiona Bruce and the team head for the races as they arrive at Chepstow Racecourse in Wales. Family treasures featured include medals from early Olympic Games, awarded when tug-of-war was a competing sport; a light bulb containing a painstakingly-made model of Lincoln Cathedral gifted by a German prisoner of war in World War 2; and perhaps the oddest and one of the oldest pieces of glass ever featured on the programme, which excites curiosity for its near-perfect condition over three hundred years after it was made.