Oh, RadioShack, you broke a lot of hearts. So much so that some will want a piece of your history to remember you by.

The original consumer electronics store — just as important to older generations as Apple stores are today — is auctioning off memorabilia as part of its second bankruptcy in less than two years.

The headquarters in downtown Fort Worth has been vacated. Generic furniture and other office equipment have already been sold.

Now what's left is some of the good stuff that's priceless to someone out there.

An oil canvas of the interior of a RadioShack store by Mark Trujillo has so far attracted a $1,300 bid, one of the highest posted the week before an online auction.

A RadioShack engraved putter had 31 bids and a top price of $80.

This RadioShack Chromatic-278 clock radio and other RadioShack items are being auctioned July 10 as part of the company's bankruptcy. (UBid Estate & Auction Services)

Straight from the '80s: A front view of the RadioShack Chromatic-278 clock radio. (UBid Estate & Auction Services)

Through July 10, Haltom City-based UBid Estate & Auction Services is taking online bids for 547 items ranging from framed portraits of past CEOs to Realistic brand radios and scanners and speakers.

More than 600 people have already registered and started placing bids.

"Everything works unless otherwise noted," said Michael Huff, owner of the auction company. The electronics have been stored away in some cases for decades. "Every time they came out with a new model, they saved some, boxed away in the warehouse."

A Chromatic clock radio has 28 bids. Its tiny buttons required an almost uncanny dexterity just to set the time or an alarm.

Only four bids had come in as of July 4 for a RadioShack Duofone Microprocessor, which looks like a souped-up answering machine. It's waiting for someone to top a $3.50 bid by someone named "Bucket of Rage." (UBid Estate & Auction Services)

A set of framed Tandy Corp. (RadioShack's former parent company) stock certificates drew a high bid of $190 so far, fetching far more than RadioShack shares on the NYSE in its final troubled years as one category of electronics after another was made obsolete by Apple's iPhone. Entire sections of the store with cameras, phones, answering machines, tape recorders, antennae and radios fell off our radar.

Longtime CEO John Roach's portrait had 24 bids with a high one of $36.50. The high bid on former CEO Len Roberts' portrait was $7 and the one of Charles Tandy had a $210 bid on it. That's probably out of respect for Tandy, longtime chairman and CEO of Tandy Corp. He purchased Boston-based RadioShack in 1963 when it was a chain of nine stores and moved it to Fort Worth. The company was renamed RadioShack Corp. in 2000.

A bronze bust of Charles Tandy, longtime chairman and CEO of Tandy Corp., is also on the auction block. (UBid Estate & Auction Services)

A bronze bust of Charles Tandy already had 43 bids, topping off at $510. It would make a nice gift for some other tech pioneer with a mind for history.

A Realistic portable AM/FM Cassette Recorder with automatic stop had 38 bids with a high of $131.69. There are lots of manuals and catalogs and random boxes of remotes and cellphones. An electronic chess board fetched $20 so far.

The Executive Decision Maker was RadioShack's office version of a Magic 8 Ball. It has attracted 24 bids with a high of $30.25.

There are 30 volumes of Intercom, the in-house employee publication and catalogs dating back to the 1960s. RadioShack stuck to its printed catalog way too long. Things could have been different if it had turned digital sooner.

The Lance Armstrong era

There's no framed portrait of Julian Day. However, there are a few pricey items from his failed turnaround attempt, which included spending a lot of money to sponsor Lance Armstrong's cycling team beginning in 2009. Somehow that was going to help.

Team RadioShack memorabilia will probably end up with the auction's highest-priced item.

Among the posters and team photos, including the Tour de France and a signed Live Strong Manifesto, are also trek jerseys autographed by Armstrong, Levi Leipheimer and others.

But the big money is on four new bikes, the kind that Armstrong raced. The bikes each have already had more than 50 bids each and the prices are well over $1,000.

At least one of those bikes, a black and red one with RadioShack on it, is predicted to be the winning item. RadioShack paid almost $10,000 for it, Huff said. "No one has been on that bike."

It's not all grand stuff. There are several framed drawings of coffee cups from the company cafe and drawings of circuit boards and cables.

RadioShack introduced the TRS-80 Model 100 portable computer in 1983. The 8-kilobyte version was $599, and the 32-kilobyte went for $1,134 back in the day, according to oldcomputers.net. It ran on four AA batteries for 16 hours and weighed 3.8 pounds. ( UBid Estate & Auction Services)

My personal favorite, Acoustic Couplers. The landline phone handset sits in the couplers and transmits from the TRS-80, offering pre-internet mobility. (UBid Estate & Auction Services)

Surprisingly, bids on the TRS-80 Model 100 are low, around $115 so far.

RadioShack introduced the TRS-80 Model 100 portable computer in 1983. For a generation of journalists, it was the industry's truly portable computer, the first laptop, if you will.

There weren't enough toys in this auction. Huff is hoping he can do it again with more items.

Winding down the business

Whatever is raised July 10 will help pay creditors, which include banks that are owed $126 million.

In March, RadioShack's parent company, General Wireless, filed for bankruptcy, as the business it carved out of RadioShack's 2016 bankruptcy failed to find a way to go forward with the 96-year-old brand.

The last store still open in North Texas is in Weatherford, and store employees are telling customers it has no closing date yet. It's among 70 corporate stores that will be closing.

You may still see RadioShack signs around in smaller towns. There are another 500 independently owned dealer stores that General Wireless is still supplying with RadioShack branded batteries and parts for now, open despite RadioShack's back-to-back bankruptcies.

Many are going by a different name and adding new categories of merchandise.

"We're still buying from them, but we're also buying from other suppliers," said Rick Barron, owner of Eastland Office Supply, located in Eastland, a town off Interstate 20 west of Fort Worth on the way to Abilene. It still has a RadioShack sign out front.

The bankruptcies have affected dealer stores like his, Barron said, "because people think you closed, too."

"We sell office supplies. We do UPS shipping," he said. "And we even sell barbecue grills."

Twitter: @MariaHalkias