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Coin collection sells for $30 million
An
anonymous (unnamed) buyer in Trenton in N.J., USA has paid more than $30
million for a collection of rare US prototype (sample) coins, some from
the 1700s, that never went into circulation, according to the dealer
that brokered the deal.
The collection consists of about 1,000 coins that collectors refer to
as pattern coins - trial designs that never went into production because
the US Mint chose other designs.
"This collection is an incredible collection. ... These were some of
the first coins ever, that were struck by the
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The front and back of one of the coins in the collection |
United States government," said Laura Sperber, a partner in
Legend Numismatics of Lincroft, N.J., which brokered the deal.
The seller wanted to remain anonymous, and the buyer, concerned about
security, agreed to be identified only as "Mr. Simpson, a Western states
collector," Sperber said.
"Both the buyer and the seller are very competitive people. And
they're very successful in their careers, and they both love the romance
and collectability of coins," Sperber said.
The coins span the period from 1792 to 1942. Highlights include test
designs for the first pennies made in 1792 and six coins from 1872 that
are often referred to as "Amazonian" patterns because the female figure
portraying liberty is much stronger and regal looking than earlier
versions.
It took the seller about 10 years to assemble the collection, Sperber
said.
Gathering such a large collection of pattern coins is difficult
because so few were created in the first place. And they were usually
supposed to stay in the possession of the Mint - after all, these were
the rejects.
"To accumulate as many patterns as there are in this collection,
that's incredible," said Douglas A. Mudd, Curator of the American
Numismatic Association Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The
coins could have made their way into private hands as gifts, or as
trades with collectors for other coins that the Mint wanted to acquire,
Sperber said.
Independent, third-party experts have verified the collection,
Sperber said.
Many of the coins bear depictions of a woman representing liberty and
not the profile of a former president, as displayed on coins currently
circulating.
Until 1909, when Abraham Lincoln's face was placed on the penny,
presidents weren't allowed on coins. At the time the first coins were
minted in 1792, putting the nation's leader on a coin seemed too similar
to the practice of kings being displayed on European coins. That wasn't
considered the best example for a country less than a decade removed
from the Revolutionary War.
"To put an individual on coinage was considered very unrepublican
because the people have the power in a republic," Mudd said.Sperber said
she hopes the magnitude of the sale will get more people interested in
collecting coins.
"They're historical. They're beautiful works of art," she said.
"They're just plain neat."
AP |