That's a beautiful set, but sadly worth very little in the collector market. Serious TV folk are much more interested in early B/W TVs from the 1940s, or early color sets from the mid- to late 1950s.
Demand for B/W TVs drops off sharply around the mid-1950s. Although TVs of that time (and newer) often perform better and have bigger screens than the 1940s sets, the electronic design had become more standardized by then, so they're uninteresting from a historical standpoint. The size and weight limit you to local buyers, which further limits the price.
The notable exceptions are TVs with an unusual design, such as the
Philco Predicta.
Last year, we sold my mother in law's estate in MN, which included a very nice 1950s Sparton console TV. This was my wife's childhood TV, fondly remembered by her and her siblings, but nobody wanted it. Our house is already crammed with old TVs and radios and I couldn't justify the cost of shipping it halfway across the USA, especially since we had no place to put it. It was sold to a couple for a few bucks; they wanted it as a decoration and promised not to make it into a fishtank.
If you want to restore this TV and use it, it will probably perform very well for a long time. But perhaps you're in the same boat as most other people, wondering where in the heck you would put such a thing. And the cost of hiring someone to make it reliable & safe for everyday use would exceed the resale value.
Phil Nelson
Phil's Old Radios
http://antiqueradio.org/index.html