The E-Sylum v6#14, April 6, 2003

whomren at coinlibrary.com whomren at coinlibrary.com
Sun Apr 6 20:26:30 PDT 2003


Welcome to The E-Sylum: Volume 6, Number 14, April 6, 2003:
an electronic publication of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society.
Copyright (c) 2003, The Numismatic Bibliomania Society.


SUBSCRIBER UPDATE

   Among recent new subscribers are Bill D'Atri, courtesy of
   Dick Hanscom of Fairbanks, Alaska.   Welcome aboard!
   We now have 541 subscribers.


JOHN J. FORD COLLECTION AND LIBRARY

   NBS Board member P. Scott Rubin writes: "This is good news
   and bad news.  The good news is that starting as early as later
   this year the entire collection of John J. Ford, Jr. is coming up
   for sale by Stack's and yes the library will be sold by Stack's
   and George Kolbe.  While it will take some time before the full
   impact of what is in this collection to be announced, it is my
   understanding that if you collect colonial coins or paper, U.S.
   Paper, numismatic literature, medals, or pioneer gold you will
   not want to miss this sale.  This may well be the Bushnell or
   Parmelee sale of the 21st century.  The bad news is that this
   looks like the end of the John Ford era in U.S. numismatics.
   John has been a good friend to NBS and we hope he will be
   around for some time.  But just the thought that he is parting
   with his collection is hard to take, even though I will look
   forward to the catalogues and the chance to own an item or
   two from John's library or collection.  Look for more
   information on the sales in the numismatic press."


CONFEDERATE BOOK UPDATES

   George Tremmel writes: "Thanks for the mention of my new
   CSA counterfeit currency book. (Actually, its length is 198
   pages, rather than 144.)

   [I ordered the book from Hugh Shull on Monday, and
   by the end of the week it was in my hands.   After only a
   short review I'm convinced it was the best $35 I've spent
   in some time.  The book is very well illustrated, with two or
   more good quality black & white illustrations on nearly every
   page of the catalog section.  The 70-page Part I "Historical
   Narrative" makes excellent reading, and the book has
   endnotes for every chapter as well as a bibliography.
   -Editor]

   Concerning the late Doug Ball's CSA currency manuscript, it
   was a joint effort with Hugh Shull.  I believe that Hugh plans
   to complete the book and bring it to publication - certainly
   good news."

   [It's a relief and a pleasure to learn that Ball's manuscript
    may yet be published - very good news indeed.  -Editor]


FROM THE SHORES OF SAN SERIFFE

   An email making the rounds of the Internet on April Fool's
   Day stated:

   "In 1977, the British newspaper "The Guardian" published a
   seven-page supplement to honor the 10th anniversary of
   San Serriffe, a republic in the Indian Ocean consisting of
   several semi-colon-shaped islands.

   Its two main islands were Upper Caisse and Lower Caisse;
   its capital was Bodoni, and its leader was General Pica.

   Few "Guardian" readers, who rang up the offices all day
   asking about the idyllic spot, noted the use of printer's
   terminology."

   Your Editor's first introduction to the Republic of San Seriffe
   spoof came with the publication of "The First Fine Silver
   Coinage of the Republic of  San Seriffe" by Henry Morris of
   Bird & Bull Press.  350 copies were produced, each containing
   a one-ounce serially-numbered silver proof  commemorative
   coin and certificate of authenticity.    This is one book I don't
   yet have in my library, as it's pricey and not exactly in my line
   of interest.  But it sounds fun.  If any of our readers have a
   copy, could you tell us if Morris acknowledges the 1977
   Guardian article?    Is the reference to the 1977 article correct,
   or yet another Internet spoof?   Gawd, I'm confused.

   Morris also published "The Booksellers of San Seriffe" in 2001,
   which, if I'm not mistaken, includes a token of George Frederick
   Kolbe, Bookseller.

   The April Fool email seems to have been cribbed from the
   "Museum of Hoaxes" web site, which notes:

   "At the Guardian itself the island of San Serriffe became a
   running gag in the years to follow. The island reappeared on
   April Fool's Day in 1978, 1980 and 1999. Moreover, each
   time it reappeared the island had changed location. It began
   in the Indian Ocean, moved to the South China Sea, and
   ended up in the North Atlantic. "
   http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/af_1977.html

   For amusement, read the site's list of the "Top 100" Hoaxes.
   Be sure to check out  #10, "The Predictions of Isaac Bickerstaff,"
   which was perpetrated by Jonathan Swift.
   http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/top100.html

   Quick Quiz:  Who can tell us Swift's connection to American
   numismatics?


1871 MINTAGE FIGURES

   Bob Julian writes: "Recently there was a query about the
   mintage figures for the 1871 quarter, presumably  Philadelphia.
   The material on mintages for the Philadelphia quarters of
   1853-1873, based on research in the original registers at the
   Archives, appeared in the June 1965 Numismatic Scrapbook
   Magazine. For those not having access to this issue, the
   entries were as follows:

   January 10    36,000
   May 11          45,000
   August 3       37,200
   Plus 960 proofs.

   Total: 119,160 pieces."


NEW U.S. PATTERN PHOTOS ONLINE

   Saul Tiechman writes:  "Here are some interesting die trials
   in the Smithsonian that many people have not seen.

   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3058.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/sip3176.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3212.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3305.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3383.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3425.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3437.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3440.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3443.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3444.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3465.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3486.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p3524.html
   http://uspatterns.com/uspatterns/p2080.html "


CONSIMILAR:  BOTH SIDES ALIKE.

   P. Scott Rubin writes: As to coins with the same design,
   but not the same dies, Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation
   Tokens of 1935, listed in the Red Book, were stuck this way.
   All eight tokens.  The one Cent was not round as like the
   others but had eight sides, for another odd piece of Americana.

   Dick Johnson writes: "You are correct in surmising there are
   tokens and medals with identical designs on both sides. I can't
   speak for coins with identical sides.

   There is even a word for describing such numismatic items:
   CONSIMILAR.  Meaning both sides alike. The dies can be
   made from the same hub, model, punch or master pattern.
   American copyist and medalist James Bolen did this a lot (and
   you should hear from Bolen authority Neil E. Musante about
   these). An example of Bolen's handiwork is Musante JAB-34,
   the Double Elephant Token.

   I know of only one instance of medals from my days of
   cataloging the work of Medallic Art Company. In 1962
   sculptor John Terken (1912-1993) made one model for a
   MONY Client Service Medal (MAco 62-108).  They
   wanted both sides alike.  We could have cut a hub from a
   positive of Terken's model, then had two dies made from that
   hub. But hubbing is specialized and requires a modern
   hubbing press. Instead of owning our own hubbing press we
   always subcontracted the hubbing to one of the tool and die
   shops we worked with. So instead of having a hub made, we
   just went ahead and cut two dies from a negative die shell of
   Terken's model. We did this in our own plant on one of the
   five Janvier die-engraving pantographs we had at the time.

   [A hubbing press is a dangerous machine.  If you don't know
   what you are doing, too much pressure can cause a die to
   shatter. It sends out shrapnel in all directions. We had 1,000-ton
   presses, the worst that could happen with these is to lose a
   finger. You can get killed from a hubbing press!]

   But why would anyone want the same design on both sides?
   (Do I need to answer?  Do you always want heads to come
   up?) In Bolen's and similar cases, they used dies of similar
   diameter to create yet another specimen for you variety-
   hungry numismatists!

   Kavan Ratnatunga sends these links to interesting images of
   coins with the same obverse and reverse.  Dutch Ceilon 1660-
   1720  Wreath Series Copper Dumps and 1785 Ceylan Bonk
   bar -  Colombo VOC 4 3/4 Stuiver

   http://serendib.org/coins/dutch/wreath_cud.html
   http://serendib.org/coins/lingen/1785_voc_c_4.75st_cub.html

   A related discussion appears on this page:
   http://serendib.org/coins/egroup/obverse_reverse.html


MICKLEY CATALOG VARIANTS

   P. Scott Rubin writes: "About the Mickley sale differences.
   It should also be noted that while many copies are hand
   priced only those with the title page stating Priced
   Catalogue were hand priced after the sale by Woodward
   or more likely his sons or employees.  The others were
   either pre-sales copies priced at the sale or after the sale
   by copying the prices from someone else's copy."


NATIONAL ARCHIVES ONLINE ACCESS

   Over 50 million historical records at the National Archives
   are available online at http://www.archives.gov/aad/.

   "The Access to Archival Databases (AAD) System gives you
   online access to electronic records that are highly structured,
   such as in databases. The initial release of AAD contains
   material from more than 30 archival series of electronic
   records, which include over 350 data files totaling well over
   50 million unique records. The series selected for AAD
   identify specific persons, geographic areas, organizations, or
   dates. Some of these series serve as indexes to accessioned
   archival records in non-electronic formats."

   Who knows what nuggets await numismatic researchers in
   these newly available archives?  Gentlemen, start your
   search engines!


NUMISMATIC ETHICS

   David Lange writes: "I've never found anything of value inside
   a book, other than the information it contained, but I have had
   some interesting finds with the coin albums I collect.  I go
   through whatever stock of old albums a dealer may have for
   sale at a show or in his shop, and it's not unusual to find a few
   lingering coins within albums that the dealer was certain were
   empty. Since my interest is in the albums alone, I always
   inform him of the find and offer to remove the coins.

   Even then, metal discs may be lurking unseen.  I once dropped
   a National brand album page for two-cent and three-cent
   pieces that I'd acquired a few years earlier. After reassuring
   myself that the corners had not been bent, I was surprised to
   discover three silver trimes projecting partway into their
   respective holes. So thin were these worn coins that they had
   slipped between the cardboard and the paper covering,
   escaping notice until the sudden jolt of hitting the floor
   dislodged them from their seclusion."

   George Kolbe writes: "Another great issue.  Over the years I
   have found a number of unusual things in books, though it is
   not a common occurrence. Thin coins, including gold ones,
   currency from many countries and eras,  and pressed plants
   and flowers are among the objects discovered. When items
   of value have been found in books sent for auction, they have
   been promptly returned to the consignor. When encountered
   in books purchased outright, disposition has varied with the
   circumstances.  Once, the seller of a very large library called
   to inquire if a very rare postage stamp had been found in one
   of his volumes. I did not find it but would have felt duty bound
   to return it if I had.  If indeed it was present in one of the
   volumes, there was a very lucky buyer.

   Perhaps the most memorable item ever found was in a nice
   library purchased years ago from a collector living alone in a
   remote town in the California desert.  It was a letter to his then
   wife complaining about the paucity of their love life. It took
   little time to determine that it was not going to be returned,
   and it quickly found its way to the circular file.

   A story about John Selden, the seventeenth century British
   scholar and numismatic author, also touches on the topic.
   Selden  used his spectacles as bookmarks, and apparently
   often forgot that he had done so.  His library was left to the
   Bodleian Library at Oxford, and when the books were
   examined by the library staff, dozens of pairs of his spectacles
   were found therein."

   Our discussion of numismatic literature deals led into a
   discussion of the larger area of numismatic transactions.  Dick
   Johnson wrote:  "When someone offers you an item in your
   specialty and it is mispriced, what do you do? Does it matter
   if this person is a professional dealer or a lay person?"

   In response, Denis Loring writes: "My personal rules are as
   follows:

   Seller a professional dealer simply offering me material:
   caveat vendor.  If I can cherrypick a rare variety or an
   undergraded coin, good for me. Exception: if it's someone
   I've done extensive business with over time, I'll tell him what
   he's got, confident we'll work something out.

   Seller a lay person who has priced material or asks me for
   an offer, not knowing my specialty:  try to find a middle
   ground between ripping the person off and paying full price.

   ANYONE, whether a novice or a pro, who asks me:
   "Denis, you're a large cent specialist, are there any rare
   varieties here?":  My offer is this: I provide attribution and fair
   value gratis, and I get first refusal at a fair price for any good
   ones I find.  Especially to a lay person, I bend over backwards
   to explain to him exactly what he has and how it's valued."


TOLL GATE DIGS

   Joe Wolfe writes: "This is an article I wrote for a metal
   detecting club's monthly newsletter and thought you might
   want it for The E-Sylum also. It would demonstrate some
   of the research successful coin shooters do to find coins or
   caches and provide a little background on where those
   dropped coins come from."

   [I've edited the article a bit to cut down its size, but
   the main points remain.  -Editor]

   "One source of sites to search for old coins are tollgates on
   pre-1900s turnpikes.  The word turnpike by definition contains
   tollgates which were the collection points of tolls on the early
   Virginia roads. ... I believe people dropped coins around the
   tollgates, in the road, at the tollgate, and on the way to the
   tollkeeper's house. Remember the tolls were collected all year
   long, even during storms, snow, sunrise, and sunset. So a coin
   dropped in the mud, snow, or dark could be easily lost.

   In my research I concentrated on Fairfax and Loudoun Counties
   but turnpikes exist all over Virginia and in other states. I found
   15 different turnpikes.

   The single and best source for tollgate locations are old maps.
   Not only do they list tollgates but they show the exact location,
   the path of the turnpike, place a date on the tollgate, and often
   provide the name of the tollkeeper. All these can help to
   pinpoint the tollgate. Other sources include books, articles, and
   archives for the old turnpike companies. Archives exist in several
   local libraries and the State Library in Richmond. The State
   Library also has an unpublished manuscript on Virginia Turnpikes.
   But maps are the best and this is where I would direct you.

   Tollgates were usually authorized every five miles and were
   often located near bridges and crossroads. I assume this was
   to prevent travelers from bypassing the tollgates.  The bridge
   created a bottleneck in the road and the crossroads allowed
   tolls to be collected from everyone passing by.  Tollgates
   often changed locations as new roads opened and when the
   tolltaker changed. Often a person already living in the area
   was selected to be the tolltaker and the tollgate moved to his
   house. So the tollgate near Difficult Run might have four
   different locations, both sides of the road and both sides of
   the stream. Of course a map only shows a snapshot of the
   tollgates on a turnpike on a certain date. If an old house
   exists next to a substantial stream it may be an undocumented
   tollgate. I should mention I found the modern reproduction
   maps from various sources of data to be worse than useless.
   They seemed to place the word "tollgate" on the map where
   it was most convenient to write it.

   I have visited many of these tollgates and I am sorry to say
   many are covered by asphalt. As our use of roads developed
   the roads were widened and the tollgate covered. The
   collection point was often located right next to the road. The
   grading of the shoulders of roads also took care of many.
   The best to detect are the ones where the tollhouse still
   stands or its ruins can be found.

   One final point is there are still many tollgates around. I found
   over 50 locations in Loudoun and Fairfax alone and according
   to its annual report the Little River Turnpike, circa 1830,
   made over $100,000 in its busiest year.

   I am still searching for an untouched tollgate and have found
   only a few coins so far. The oldest was a 1773 pillar dollar
   that was paper-thin."


THE NASTY OLD BOOK I THREW AWAY

   Granvyl G. Hulse, Jr. writes: "I saw this joke today and just
   couldn't resist sending it on.

   A collector of rare books ran into an acquaintance who told
   him he had just thrown away an old Bible that he found in a
   dusty, old box.  He happened to mention that
   Guten-somebody-or-other had printed it.

   "Not Gutenberg?" gasped the collector.

   "Yes, that was it!"

   "You idiot! You've thrown away one of the first books ever
   printed. A copy recently sold at auction for half a million dollars!"

   "Oh, I don't think this book would have been worth anything
   close to that much," replied the man. "It was scribbled all over
   in the margins by some guy named Luther."


BOOK DEALING AS A PROFESSION

   Numismatic literature dealer John Burns had a table at the
   Baltimore coin show a few weeks ago.   Leaving the hall to
   meet John Kraljevich and fellow dealer Charles Davis, he
   was stopped by a panhandler who asked, "Can you spare
   something, sir?"   Well, John's not exactly the last of the big
   spenders, and sales at the show up to that point had been at
   best so-so.   So John said to the woman, "Why don't you
   get a job like everyone else?"

  "But I don't got no skills!" came her reply, and John blurted
   out, "I don't have any damn skills, either - why do you think
   I'm a BOOKDEALER!?"    Charlie nearly spewed his beer
   laughing when he heard the tale, but according to John, they
   both stopped suddenly, thinking, what are we laughing about?

   [The above was related over the phone by John Burns,
    who doesn't have an email account, but agreed to share the
   story with our readers.   -Editor]


FEATURED WEB PAGE

   This week's featured web page is about the Barnstaple Shilling
   of  Barnstaple, North Devon,  "the oldest Borough Town in
   Britain."

   "The tradition whereby the Mayor of Barnstaple presents coins
   to the inhabitants of the almshouses and residential homes in
   the town soon after he has been elected to office probably has
   its origins in the will of Henry Gardner Tippett who died in
   1795."

   "... the tradition of presenting coins to the almshouse residents
   has continued, albeit in a different form, to the present day.
   Now it is the Mayor who distributes the coins.  A sixpence
   used to be given but following the introduction of decimalisation
   and the later withdrawal of that coin a five-pence piece was
   used."

      http://www.barnstaple-history.co.uk/barnstaple_shilling.htm


  Wayne Homren
  Numismatic Bibliomania Society


  The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a
  non-profit organization promoting numismatic
  literature.   For more information please see
  our web site at http://www.coinbooks.org/
  There is a membership application available on
  the web site.  To join, print the application and
  return it with your check to the address printed
  on the application.   For those without web access,
  write to David Sklow, NBS Secretary-Treasurer,
  P.O. Box 76192, Ocala, FL  34481.

  For Asylum mailing address changes and other
  membership questions, contact Dave at this email
  address: sdsklow at aol.com

  To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum,
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