The E-Sylum v19n24 June 12, 2016

The E-Sylum esylum at binhost.com
Sun Jun 12 19:03:33 PDT 2016


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The E-Sylum
  
  An electronic publication of
  The Numismatic Bibliomania Society


Volume 19, Number 24, June 12, 2016
**
WAYNE'S WORDS: THE E-SYLUM JUNE 12, 2016
<#a01>
**
MORE SELECTIONS FROM KOLBE & FANNING’S SALE #142
<#a02>
**
SIATRAS INTERNATIONAL BOOKSHOP SUMMER 2016 SALES
<#a03>
**
NEW BOOK: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY, VOL. 7
<#a04>
**
NEW BOOK: 2017 STANDARD CATALOG OF WORLD COINS, 1901-2000
<#a05>
**
RED BOOK RECOLLECTIONS: RICHARD SCHWARY
<#a06>
**
WALTER PERSCHKE 1939-2016
<#a07>
**
THE NEWMAN PORTAL SCANS THE CALCOIN NEWS
<#a08>
**
NCCA MONOGRAPH #3: LIBERTY SEATED COINAGE
<#a09>
**
NOTES FROM E-SYLUM READERS: JUNE 12, 2016
<#a10>
**
NINETEENTH CENTURY U.S. MINT PROOF DIE TERMS
<#a11>
**
DAVIDGE GAMBRILL (1836-1905)
<#a12>
**
MORE ON CARLING GRESHAM
<#a13>
**
MORE ON HALL OF FAME FOR GREAT AMERICANS MEDALS 
<#a14>
**
ANA SUMMER SEMINAR COURSE ON MEDALS
<#a15>
**
MEDAL COLLECTORS OF AMERICA 2016 MEETING
<#a16>
**
1970-S QUARTER STRUCK ON 1941 CANADA QUARTER
<#a17>
**
CLANDESTINE STRIKE: 1970-S PROOF QUARTER ERROR
<#a18>
**
1942 EXPERIMENTAL CENT OFFERED
<#a19>
**
LYN KNIGHT JUNE 2016 AUCTION SALE HIGHLIGHTS
<#a20>
**
FIND IN ISRAEL MAY INCLUDE EARLY COIN COLLECTION
<#a21>
**
THE TYNEMOUTH EXTENSION MEDAL 
<#a22>
**
THE NEW ZEALAND GALLANTRY STAR MEDAL
<#a23>
**
THE FIRST VICTORIA CROSS AWARDED TO A MUSLIM
<#a24>
**
HARPERS FERRY QUARTER LAUNCHED
<#a25>
**
MOVIE MONEY USED IN CANTON, OHIO
<#a26>
**
BANK OF ENGLAND UNVEILS NEW CHURCHILL NOTE
<#a27>
**
ARTICLE PROFILES POLYMER BANKNOTE INVENTOR DAVID SOLOMON
<#a28>
**
COLLECTORS LINE UP FOR BANK OF THAILAND COMMEMORATIVE
<#a29>
**
SHIRE POST MINT'S FANTASY WORLD COINS
<#a30>
**
DECORATING A ROOM WITH A BOOK TSUNAMI
<#a31>
**
FEATURED WEB SITE: KNIGHTS OF SAINT ELIGIUS
<#a32>





Click here to read this issue on the web

Click here to access the complete archive

To comment or submit articles, reply to whomren at gmail.com




WAYNE'S WORDS: THE E-SYLUM JUNE 12, 2016



New subscribers this week include: 
William 'Trey' Todd, 
Daniel L Carroll and
Valerie Rivera.
Welcome aboard! We now have 1,981 subscribers.


This week we open with updates from Kolbe & Fanning and Demetrius Siatras and two new books.
Other topics this week include The CalCoin News, Carling Gresham, medal collecting, that 1970-S quarter struck on a Canadian coin, the Tynemouth Extension Medal and the first Victoria Cross awarded to a Muslim.


To learn more about Byzantine Coins in Central Europe, Walter Perschke,  M.A. Powills, Davidge Gambrill, the Harpers Ferry aurter launch ceremony, the Bank of England's launch of the new Churchill banknote, Hydrogen Embrittlement, Pitting Corrosion,  the Knights of St. Eligius and the Iron Coin of the Faceless Man, read on. Have a great week, everyone!


Wayne Homren 
Editor, The E-Sylum

 



MORE SELECTIONS FROM KOLBE & FANNING’S SALE #142


Maria Fanning submitted this press release describing some more interesting lots in the Kolbe & Fanning June 24-25, 2016 sale.  Thanks!
-Editor



Kolbe & Fanning’s 142nd sale of numismatic literature will be held on June 24 and 25, and bids have been coming in at a good rate. The two-part sale features works on ancient, medieval and modern coins from around the world and aims to have something for everyone. 


The sale is arranged in two parts. The first, featuring 380 lots, will be conducted as a live online sale on Friday, June 24. Bidders may participate in this part of the sale in advance via mail, phone, fax or email--or on the day of the sale through our live bidding platform at 

auction.numislit.com. Register in advance, browse lots and place bids at your leisure: all lots in the first part are illustrated in the online catalogue. Live bidding will commence at noon eastern time on June 24.


The second part of the sale features over 600 lots, and will be conducted as a traditional mail-bid sale (with no online component). This second part of the sale will close at 9:00 pm eastern time on Saturday, June 25. Bids may be placed via mail, phone, fax or email; bids will be treated as limits and reduced as competition dictates. 


Some highlights include the following:




Lot 39 (example)



Lot 37: Canessa’s sale of the Enrico Caruso collection


Lot 39: a complete set of the first 100 CNG sales




Lot 103



Lot 41: a charming set of the second (preferred) edition of Cohen


Lot 103: a Set of Mazzini’s Monete Imperiale Romane





Lot 146



Lot 146: a rare 1942 Stack’s fixed price catalogue of ancient gold coins with photographic plates


Lot 173: a 1965 Vinchon sale of ancient coins with unlisted photographic plates laid in






Lots 217 and 250



Lots 217: Hill’s Corpus of Italian Renaissance medals 


Lot 250: an original set of Saulcy on Byzantine coins





Lot 267



Lot 267: an original, unbound set of Volume 5 of The Numismatist


Lot 277: a rare F.C.C. Boyd catalogue of colonial coins for sale





Lots 290 and 378



Lot 290: a virtually complete set of Sheridan Downey sales


Lot 378: two relatively common works on Ohio paper money bound with a third, a very rare 1906 Numismatist offprint on “Ohio Banks from 1803 to 1861.”


The sale also offers exceptionally complete runs of ancient coin catalogues from many of the most important firms, including Harlan Berk, Jean Vinchon, Edward Waddell, Paul-Francis Jacquier, Nomos, Joel Malter, Numismatic Fine Arts, Numismatik Lanz, Frank Sternberg and Bank Leu.


Printed catalogues have been mailed to established clients; a PDF of the catalogue has been posted to the main 

numislit.com website for those who prefer to read online. In addition, prospective bidders are able to access the live online catalogue and register to bid in Part I of the sale through 

auction.numislit.com. 


Kolbe & Fanning Numismatic Booksellers LLC is a licensed and bonded auction firm in the State of Ohio. For more information, please see the Kolbe & Fanning website at 

numislit.com 
or email David Fanning at 

df at numislit.com. We look forward to your participation. 











SIATRAS INTERNATIONAL BOOKSHOP SUMMER 2016 SALES


Siatras International Bookshop in Athens, Greece specializes in titles on Greek history and civilization, with emphasis on the Classic and Byzantine periods. Demetrius Siatras has begun offering a sale on selected numismatic titles. 
Here's the first title; the discount price is effective for the week of July 13-19.  Check their web site for more offerings over the next six weeks.
-Editor




Byzantine Coins in Central Europe
Between the 5th and 10th Century
By Marcin Wołoszyn, et al


# 2268. Krakow: Polish Academy of Arts & Sciences, 2009.
Multilingual illustrated edition: papers in German, English or French,
with summaries in English. Hard cover, 31X22 cm, 684 pp.; net weight
2225 gr. ISBN 978-83-7676-008-7.


List price EUR 154.00 (USD 175.00) – 50% discount !
Your price: EUR 77.00
Plus shipping cost depending on destination.


ORDERS:


 INVOICE / BANK TRANSFER: Just send a message to siatras at hotmail.com;

 CASH ON DELIVERY; only Austria, Croatia, France, Germany, Hungary,
Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal and Turkey.

 EΛΛΑΔΑ & ΚΥΠΡΟΣ: Τηλεφωνήστε 210-3300235.

 PayPal. Use the links at the last page.



ROMANS, BARBARIANS, TREASURES - HISTORICAL INTERPRETATION. THE INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION:


 Tribute und Jahrgelder in frühmittelalterlichen Königsschätzen als Faktoren der Münzdistribution in Ostmitteleuropa, by
Matthias Hardt

 A network for the study of coin finds in Europe, by Georges Depeyrot



LATE ANTIQUITY: EMPIRE


 From Aetius to Clovis: an unpublished argenteus struck at Trier at the end of the 5th century, by François Planet

 INVICTISSIMUS AUTOR — an unusual series of Baduila (Totila): a new example from Croatia, by Željko Demo

 Coin hoards from late 6th and 7th century discovered in the FYROM, by Maja Hadzi-Maneva

 Single finds from the 5th century A.D. in Dobrogea, by Delia Moisil, et al

 Some guiding remarks on Byzantine coin circulation in Dobrogea (6th-7th c. A.D.), by Gabriel Custurea

 La circulation monétaire à (L)Ibida (Scythie Mineure) du Ve siècle au début du VIIe siècle, by Mihaela Iacob



MIGRATION PERIOD: BARBARICUM (4th-5th CENTURY):


 Ost- und weströmische Goldmünzen des 5. Jahrhunderts im Karpatenbecken, by Péter Prohászka

 Spätrömische und völkerwanderungszeitliche Münzhorte und andere Münzfunde im nördlichen Karpatenbecken, by EvaKolníková, Karol Pieta

 Germanic gold bracteates from the hoard in Zagórzyn near Kalisz, by Aleksander Bursche

 Remarks on the inflow of Roman coins into Southern Poland in the second half of the 4th and in the 5th centuries A.D., by
Jarosław Bodzek

 A solidus of Theodosius II from Opaka in the context of other finds from distric Lubaczów dated to AD 5th century, by Marcin
Piotrowski, Grzegorz Dąbrowski

 Der Zufluss von Solidi in die südlichen Ostseegebiete, by Renata Ciołek

 Late Roman and Byzantine coins found in Denmark, by Helle W. Horsnaes

 Solidus finds in the Northern lands, by Tuukka Talvio

 Byzantinische Münzen des ausgehenden 5. bis beginnenden 8. Jahrhunderts in den östlichen Regionen des Merowingerreiches,
by Jörg Drauschke

 Die byzantinischen und karolingischen Fundmünzen aus dem österreichischen Bereich der Avaria — Eine Neubearbeitung, by
Heinz Winter

 Finds of the early Byzantine coins of the 6th and 7th century in the territory of the Czech Republic, by Jiří Militký

 Finds of Byzantine coins from the 5th-10th century from the northern part of the Carpathian Basin, by Ján Hunka

 Antike Münzen im Gebiet der Slowakei aus der Zeit des Awarischen Khaganats, by Jozef Zábojník

 Der Fund von Kleinschelken (Siebenbürgen, 1856) im Lichte neuentdeckter Archivdaten, by Péter Somogyi

 Face value or bullion value? Early Byzantine coins beyond the Lower Danube border, by Andrei Gândilă

 Byzantinische Münzen aus dem 6.7. Jh. in Polen, by Marcin Wołoszyn

 Byzantine coin finds from the 6th to the 8th century between Elbe and Oder and their meaning for settlement history, by Felix
Biermann

 Byzantine coins of the 5th-9th century and their imitations in the Central and Eastern Ciscaucasus, by Yurij A. Prokopenko



MIDDLE AGES:


 Coin finds of Emperor Constantine V Copronymus in southern Croatia, by Tomislav Šeparović

 The Byzantine Empire and the territories north of the Lower Danube (9th-early 11th c.). The numismatic evidence, by Ernest
Oberländer-Târnoveanu

 Byzantine coins from the 9th-10th century from the Czech Republic, by Nad’a Profantová

 The Roman and Byzantine coins in the hoard find from Kelč (Czech Republic), by Luboš Polanský & Lenka Vacinová

 Some remarks on the beginning of influx of Byzantine coins into Wielkopolska in the 10th century, by Adam Gliksman

 A gilded miliaresion from excavations in the market square in Cracow, by Maciej Salamon

 Funde byzantinischer Münzen in Estland, by Ivar Leimus

 A Byzantine solidus coin from the research of B.A. Zvizdec’kyj in Iskorosten, by Andrei V. Petrauskas

 A remarkable 10th century warrior burial from the tumulus on the territory of Prince Volodymyr’s town in Kyiv, by M.M. Ievlev

 New facts in the numismatics of medieval Cherson, by Eugeny Ja. Turovsky

 From money-trade to barter. Economic transformation in Byzantine Crimea (10th-13th century), by Thomas Brüggemann



For more information, see: 


https://booksoncoins.blogspot.gr/p/blog-page_11.html

 



NEW BOOK: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY, VOL. 7


Dennis Tucker of Whitman Publishing forwarded this press release about the latest volume in their monumental series on U.S. Obsolete Paper Money.  Thanks.
-Editor




Whitman Publishing announces the upcoming release of volume 7 of the Whitman Encyclopedia of Obsolete Paper Money, by Q. David Bowers. In 736 pages this volume covers the early bank currency of the Southern states of Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas. The book will debut on June 28, 2016, and before then can be pre-ordered from booksellers and hobby shops nationwide and online (including at www.Whitman.com), for $69.95.
 

The Whitman Encyclopedia of Obsolete Paper Money is a multiple-volume study of currency issued from 1782 to 1866, before the modern era of National Banks and the Federal Reserve. Over the course of these decades more than 3,000 state-chartered banks issued their own paper money, which facilitated much of the nation’s day-to-day commerce.


In volume 7 Bowers, a well-known historian and past president of the American Numismatic Association, gives the history of 182 towns and cities in the states covered, as well as of the nearly 500 bank in those towns that issued this uniquely American currency. Each note is studied, and thousands are pictured in full color, with information on grading, rarity, values, significant auction results, advice for collectors, and more.


“Many old Southern bank notes are out there, waiting to be discovered and identified,” said Bowers. “There are rare bills worth hundreds and even thousands of dollars. At the same time, bargains abound in the marketplace, and a smart collector can build a beautiful set of historical Southern notes very affordably.”


Active collectors, researchers, dealers, historians, and other experts have volunteered their time and knowledge to help create this new encyclopedia series. The state editors for the Southern states of Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas included noted specialists and researchers Rodney Kelley, Tony Swicer, Randy K. Haynie, Justin McClure, Gary Burhop, and Mike Marotta.







Paper-money expert Randy Shipley wrote the foreword to volume 7. “Obsolete bank notes provide us with a very real glimpse into this great nation’s past,” Shipley said. “Our banking system has changed, although our history has not. The beauty, appeal, allure, and value of obsolete bank notes is almost unimaginably captured by Bowers within these pages. An amazing feat, to say the least.”


Whitman Senior Associate Editor Caitlyn Trautwein said, “Until now, the histories of these Southern towns and banks have not been presented in a way that is accessible for collectors. Volume 7 of the Whitman Encyclopedia changes that, as the histories have been compiled from dozens of primary and secondary sources and collated into a single invaluable resource.”







Earlier volumes of the Whitman Encyclopedia of Obsolete Paper Money include an overview of the field, and detailed coverage of the New England states of Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont, as well as the Southern states of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Future volumes will cover the rest of the South Atlantic states, the Mid-Atlantic states, the American Midwest, the District of Columbia, and territories.


Collectors, dealers, historians, and hobbyists interested in assisting on future volumes may contact Whitman Publishing at 

Obsoletes at Whitman.com.


Because Whitman Publishing is the Official Supplier of the American Numismatic Association, ANA members receive a 10% discount when ordering directly. The book can also be borrowed for free as a benefit of membership, through the Dwight N. Manley Numismatic Library.


Whitman Encyclopedia of Obsolete Paper Money
Volume 7: South Atlantic, Part 2—Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas
By Q. David Bowers; edited by Rodney Kelley, Tony Swicer, Randy K. Haynie, Justin McClure, Gary Burhop, and Mike Marotta; foreword by Randy Shipley
ISBN 0794843964
Hardcover, 8.5 x 11 inches, 736 pages
Full color
Retail $69.95 U.S.                                                
                      
Inside volume 7: How to use this book  ●  The obsolete bank notes of Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas, covering 182 towns and cities and 492 banks, including Proofs, remainders, and uncut sheets, and counterfeit, spurious, and altered notes  ●  Glossary  ●  Bibliography  ●  Detailed index  ●  2,200+ images  ●  5,262 individual notes


To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see: 


NEW BOOK: WHITMAN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v17n21a03.html)



NEW BOOKS : ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY, VOLS 3 & 4

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v17n44a03.html)



NEW BOOK: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY, VOL. 5

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n12a03.html)



NEW BOOK: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF OBSOLETE PAPER MONEY, VOL. 6

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n03a05.html)


 






NEW BOOK: 2017 STANDARD CATALOG OF WORLD COINS, 1901-2000


A new edition of the Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000 has been published by Krause Publications.
-Editor




2017 Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000
44th Edition
By Thomas Michael


The 2017 Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 44th edition, provides the most compelling and complete reference to 20th century coins on the market. 


Unsurpassed in content and coverage, this massive, tradition-rich catalog, vetted by an international network of experts, provides a comprehensive worldview for beginning or serious collectors, researchers and coin dealers specializing in 20th century coins.


Extensive yet easily managed, the catalog is organized by country, and each listing provides:


Current values for coins listed by date, mintmark and grade

Globally accepted KM reference numbers

Clear description and invaluable detail



What's more, listings for coins minted in silver, gold, platinum and palladium offer key information for navigating the often-turbulent precious metals seas, including:


Total coin weight

Fineness

Actual precious metal weight



For more than four decades, the Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, has made it possible to invest with confidence in a hobby offering a rich reward!


About the Author
Editor and Market Analyst Thomas Michael has served as director of world coin values for all of Krause Publications' world coin catalogs for the past 30 years. Equipped with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history and Master of Arts degree in economics, Michael, who has a lifelong passion for numismatics, has played a critical role in the creation of more than 100 industry-leading references.


SKU:	S9924
Author/Speaker/Editor:	Thomas Michael
Format:	Paperback
ISBN 13:	9781440246548
Number Of Pages:	2352


For more information, or to order, see: 


2017 Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000

(www.shopnumismaster.com/2017-standard-catalog-of-world-coins-1901-2000)
 



RED BOOK RECOLLECTIONS: RICHARD SCHWARY


The latest entry on the Coin Update series on the Redbook describes a chance encounter with founding author Richard Yeo.
-Editor





Coin Update continues its series dedicated to reflecting on the long history of Whitman Publishing’s Guide Book of United States Coins, also known as the Red Book, now in its 70th edition. “Red Book Recollections” features personal reflections written by Red Book contributors, collectors, and others with the aim of providing different perspectives on the long-lived reference work. 


Our second narrative comes from Richard Schwary, Red Book contributor, former president of the Professional Numismatists Guild, and president of California Numismatic Investments. 



Over the years the name “Red Book” became so comfortable that even today I pause a moment to recall the actual title of A Guide Book of United States Coins when recommending it to the public. Like today, it was an absolute necessity when I was in grade school. But in those early years pricing was rather flat so a new copy each year was considered a luxury. I taped and numbered my most popular sections, those being silver dollars and Lincoln cents, for easy access. And when constant use broke down the binder I repaired it with more tape and reinforcements. There were, of course, other good sources of information but these insights were simply noted in the margins of my current Red Book and the back cover used to note questions or other things of interest.


Years later it was these fond memories that made being a price contributor to this fine book a particular honor. But the really fortunate part of this numismatic fun happened at the 1987 ANA convention. Concurrently each year the Professional Numismatists Guild held its annual banquet. After a round of drinks and the usual conversation we all settled down to a table for dinner and the usual festivities. The seat next to me was vacant and soon a dignified older fellow sat down and began a polite conversation. His dress was a conservative suit and tie and we talked quietly about the banquet and the number of people attending. After a few minutes it dawned on me that this was Richard S. Yeoman. I excused myself and said, “You must be Richard Yeoman, of Red Book fame.” I had never met him in person so I introduced myself.


He shook my hand and quietly said, “Why, yes I am, it is nice to meet you.” That was it, not an ounce of pretense in this man who helped form the complete structure of my early coin career. At any ANA convention the amount of bravado most dealers are exposed to amounts to something like going to the Super Bowl. But here, by complete chance I talked with an icon whose book will always be quoted. Yet he was so unassuming that it caught me quite off guard. Our entire conversation had nothing to do with his accomplishments but focused on the coin industry. To say that such a touch is rare today has to be an understatement.


As the night drew to a close we all prepared to leave, and I could not help but wonder: how many people recognized this conservatively dressed gentleman? This banquet room was filled with noted dealers, numismatic scholars, the coin press, fascinating writers, and interesting coin people of every stripe. Yet how many of these notables could claim to have touched everyone in the room? Surely such a list would be short, but R.S. Yeoman and A Guide Book of United States Coins would be a contender for first place.



Richard Schwary’s recollection first appeared in A Guide Book of the Official Red Book of United States Coins by Frank J. Colletti.



To read the complete article, see: 


Red Book Recollections: Richard Schwary

(http://news.coinupdate.com/red-book-recollections-richard-schwary/)


 






WALTER PERSCHKE 1939-2016


The Chicago Sun-Times reported the death of coin dealer Walter Perschke on June 7, 2016.
-Editor




If there’s a coin equivalent of the Honus Wagner baseball card — the Holy Grail for collectors — it’s  the celebrated Brasher doubloon, the first gold coin struck in the United States and one of the rarest in the world.


The doubloon was created in 1787 by silver and goldsmith Ephraim Brasher, whose clients included his neighbor, George Washington.


Just seven 1787 Brasher doubloons are known to exist. Chicago coin dealer Walter Perschke’s was considered the finest.


“It was struck before the U.S. Mint even started operating in 1792,” said Max Spiegel, vice president of sales and marketing for the Numismatic Guaranty Corporation, which graded Mr. Perschke’s doubloon for him.



The storied coin even figured in the 1947 Philip Marlowe film noir “The Brasher Doubloon.”


It’s a glowing beauty. One side is stamped with an eagle, its talons bearing an olive branch and arrows, signifying peace and power. Its right wing is imprinted with “EB,” Brasher’s initials. The flip side shows sunrise over mountains and the sea, symbolizing the nation’s new beginnings, according to Spiegel.


When Mr. Perschke bought it for a world-record $430,000 in 1979, “It was a breathtaking event,” said Jeff Bernberg of Willowbrook’s Rarcoa (Rare Coin Company of the World).


Mr. Perschke, who died May 20 in Chicago of bladder cancer at age 77, talked about the doubloon’s mystique in a 1987 Chicago Sun-Times interview.







In 1979, when he bought the Brasher doubloon, it made international headlines. It hadn’t been up for auction for 57 years and had last sold in 1922 for $3,000 — a record at the time.


Mr. Perschke held onto the doubloon for 35 years before auctioning it off for $4.59 million.


Mr. Perschke’s fascination with coins began as a student at Lane Tech High School on the North Side.


“His history teacher got him involved in a coin club,” said another son, Adam, and he became the entrepreneur-owner of Numisco, a company that dealt in precious metals and coins.


He appeared often on TV on “Wall Street Week” and WCIU-Channel 26’s “Ask an Expert.”


“He was driven,” Ian Perschke said of his father. “And he accomplished a lot.”


After selling the doubloon, Mr. Perschke invested in something completely different: spirituality. He bought the Monthly Aspectarian magazine, renaming it Conscious Community. It promotes spirituality, body-mind health and higher consciousness. The July issue is dedicated to him, circulation manager Kasia Szumal said.


Mr. Perschke offered guided meditation and operated Spiritual Learning Center camps in Indiana, where participants were invited to “join us in a spiritual retreat of personal discovery,” according to Facebook.


“His famous talks were about dream interpretation and visualizing success,” Szumal said.


To read the complete article, see: 


Coin dealer Walter Perschke, dead at 77, owned storied doubloon

(http://chicago.suntimes.com/news/coin-dealer-walter-perschke-dead-at-77-owned-storied-doubloon/)



Here's some more information from Walter's Chicago Tribune obituary.
-Editor



Walter was born on February 25th, 1939 in McHenry, Illinois to Walter and Marie Perschke. He attended high school at Lane Tech and received his undergraduate degree from The University of Chicago, where he ran track and was the president of his fraternity, Psi Upsilon. He was an internationally-renowned numismatic expert and businessman, known for acquiring storied coins such as the Brasher Doubloon and the American Quint. He was a finance columnist for Chicago Daily News, had his own Emmy-nominated TV show, Ask an Expert, and appeared regularly on PBS's Wall Street Week. 


To read the complete obituary, see: 


Walter Perschke

(www.legacy.com/obituaries/chicagotribune/obituary.aspx?pid=180150059)
 


I met Walter briefly at the 2011 convention of the American Numismatic Association, where he had  the 1783 Type II Quint on display at Bill Burd's table.
-Editor





Bill Burd and Walter Perschke



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


WAYNE'S NUMISMATIC DIARY: AUGUST 21, 2011

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v14n35a13.html)




THE NEWMAN PORTAL SCANS THE CALCOIN NEWS


The latest addition to the Newman Numismatic Portal is the  CalCoin News.  Project Coordinator Len Augsburger provided the following report. Thanks!  
-Editor




The  Calcoin News was published by the California State Numismatic Association (CSNA) from 1947 to 2003, and the Newman Portal has scanned the entire run of this regional publication. Early issues, c. 1950-1970, share a “look and feel” with the nationally circulated Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine – so much that one wonders if the same printer was used for both.  The content is similarly comparable, with the exception of the voluminous advertising found in Scrapbook. 


Later issues demonstrate the move to desktop publishing, along with a continued standard of useful research. The Spring 2000 issue, for example, features an analysis of signatures of Francis Spinner, who signed many currency notes and documents in his capacity as a bank official, congressman, and U.S. Treasurer. 


In 2004, CSNA joined forces with the Numismatic Association of Southern California (NASC) to publish The California Numismatist. This publication continues today, jointly published by both organizations, with Greg Burns as Editor. The Newman Portal wishes to thanks Greg Burns and Howard Feltham, CSNA President, for their assistance with this project.


Link to Calcoin News on the Newman Portal: 


https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/publisherdetail/512448




Remember, this is only ONE of the many great publications now available in the Newman Numismatic Portal.   And this one entry encompasses 57 YEARS of numismatic articles.  Please do browse the collection and repeat your favorite search terms.  A topic you were looking for just last week may now turn up in  CalCoin News.
-Editor

 
 



NCCA MONOGRAPH #3: LIBERTY SEATED COINAGE


At my request, Mark Verbeck forwarded an image of his copy of National Coin Collectors Association Monograph #3.  Thanks! 
These are apparently scarce items today.  It's unclear (to me, at least) how many were originally produced or sold.  
-Editor




Monograph #3 LIBERTY SEATED COINAGE: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE COLLECTING OF LIBERTY SEATED HALF DIMES, TWENTY-CENT PIECES, QUARTERS, HALF DOLLARS, AND DOLLARS. (6/91)



Can any of the numismatic bibliopiles among us come up with a copy of Mongraph #1 on numismatic literature? 
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


NATIONAL COIN COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION MONOGRAPHS

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a12.html)

 



  THE BOOK BAZARRE
 SELECTIONS FROM THE JOHN HUFFMAN LIBRARY: Browse and Shop Approximately 3,000 Numismatic Books from the Respected Library
 of John Huffman—All Books Recently Discounted 40%. Click here or go to
 www.SecondStorybooks.com click on “All Subjects” and select “John Huffman Collection”






NOTES FROM E-SYLUM READERS: JUNE 12, 2016


 M.A. Powills, Numismatic Bibliophile 
Dick Johnson writes:



M.A. Powills was mentioned in last week’s E-Sylum where his ANA membership cards were illustrated. Mike was an exceptional numismatist and fine gentleman but demanded condition in his books as well as his coins. When I visited his home in South Chicago once He showed me his extensive numismatic library.
 

He had special shelves made which were beveled on the front edge. This allowed the bottom spine never to touch the shelf. No matter how wide or deep a book was they all extended a fraction of an inch beyond this bevel. Obviously all his books were mint condition. Occasionally he sold duplicates from his library by fixed list price (some of which ended up in my library).  After his death this library was sold in four Kolbe sales, 1966-69.  



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


SELECTIONS FROM Kolbe & Fanning’S SALE #142

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a02.html)


 More on Kelly's Coins & Chatter 
Regarding the completeness of the Newman Numismatic Portal's digitized set of Kelly's Coins & Chatter, 
David Gladfelter writes:


Michael Sullivan says that the list of 127 issues in Bourne is complete. See The Asylum 11(3):11. I have a bound volume containing 110 of them.




Rick Stroman writes:


The one and only issue I have in my collection is the first trial issue. I have scanned and submitted the copy to the Newman Portal Lib. Here is a copy of the first page.




Thanks!  I used to have a set of these, but don't remember if the sample issue was included.
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


NEWMAN PORTAL SCANS KELLY’S COINS AND CHATTER

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a10.html)



 Vocabulary Word: Papyrologist 
James Higby writes:


I love reading a book or an article that contains a word I have never seen, yet know instantly what it means.  This was the case while reading "The Harlan J. Berk Ltd. Numismatic Library" by Shanna Berk Schmidt in the most recent number of The Asylum.  "Papyrologist" - the word just rolls off the tongue with linguistic class and grace!




I like it!  Remember, while The E-Sylum is free to all, only paid members of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society recieve our print journal, The Asylum. Atop each E-Sylum issue (on the right side) is information on NBS membership.  Join us today!  Using PayPal through our web site, you can sign up with just a few clicks.
-Editor



 Gawain O'Connor on Zinc Coins 
Regarding the May 29, 2016 E-Sylum article by Gary Beals headlined Zinc, You Stink!,
Gawain O'Connor writes:



One of my main collecting goals when I was in high school was to get all the different zinc coins from around the world. I eventually produced a pamphlet (and sent a couple to the American Numismatic Association library - call number CC68.O2).


 I agree pure zinc leaves much to be desired as a coinage metal, but it is great in alloys. But I do wonder why the U.S. Mint doesn't use bronze blanks for the one cent proof coins - I think the extra expense would have been worth it to continue the copper/bronze cent tradition.




Thanks.  I wasn't aware of the pamphlet.
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


GARY BEALS: ZINC, YOU STINK!

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n22a13.html)

 Printing the Zero-Rupee Note

Regarding locating examples of the zero-Rupee anti-corruption note, 
Ron Haller-Williams writes:


You said, "We're still looking for an example", echoing John Mutch's query in the previous newsletter.


Well, if you follow back the thread, you'll see that the whole idea is from "5th Pillar".
So go to 

http://www.5thpillar.org/programs/zero-rupee-note and select a language from TAMIL, MALAYALAM, TELUGU KANNADA or HINDI.  Of course, these might not be exactly the same as the 3,000,000+ handed out by 5th Pillar and its supporters, but ...
Or go to 

http://zerocurrency.org/ where it is suggested that you select from a long list the country appropriate for your needs, in order to print your own! (one side only, unfortunately).




I didn't realize these could be printed out, but it makes sense that the organization would want to make them widely available.
Thanks. 
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


MORE ON COLLECTING ZERO RUPEE NOTES

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a34.html)


 The Millionaire and the Bard 
Regarding the book The Millionaire and the Bard, 
Ralf Böpple writes:



Just a quick note to let you know that indeed there was one reader very much interested in this book. Thanks for bringing it up and thanks for "allowing" it into the newsletter. If I look back at the number of books - numismatic and non-numismatic - that I have read over the last years thanks to them having been been mentioned here!


In the mid-1990s when I was in Washington for the first time, my travel companion was very much into Shakespeare, and so she took me to the Folger Library with her. I still remember one thought I had at that time: how crazy it sounded that somebody collected over 80 copies of one and the same edition of the same book. 


Not that I couldn't understand it, having been infected with the collector's bug already. In exchange she accompanied me to the Smithsonian's numismatic collection. As an American from the East Coast, she had been to the museum before, with school, on family vacations, but she didn't even know (or remember) that there were coins on permanent exposition. Needless to say, being with somebody who knew a thing or two about coins made it more interesting for her (at least for the first half hour or so..)




Thanks.   I generally figure that if one reader is interested enough by something to send it in for publication, then several others will likely feel the same way, even if it isn't fully numismatic.  We're all cut from the same cloth.  Glad you enjoyed the book.
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


BOOK REVIEW: THE MILLIONAIRE AND THE BARD

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a08.html)



 PennyWise Wine 
Tom Sheehan writes:


My wife and I are on a road trip to Nantucket. We're in Chicago for the weekend and found this wine. Not bad!




How about that?  Thanks.  I think our Early American Coppers friends should order a case or two for their meetings at the August ANA World's Fair of Money.
-Editor











NINETEENTH CENTURY U.S. MINT PROOF DIE TERMS


Dick Johnson submitted this note on vocabulary terms related to 19th century U.S. Mint proof coin dies.  Thanks!
-Editor



I get a lot of feedback from numismatists who acquire a copy of my  Encyclopedia of Coin and Medal Technology. These experts amplify – or even correct –  statements found in an entry in which they have extensive or expert knowledge. One of these arrived this week from early American coinage expert Craig Sholley.
 

Craig mentioned a term I was unaware of; Hydrogen Embrittlement and also mentioned Pitting Corrosion. 


 Hydrogen Embrittlement 
He stated the hydrogen embrittlement was fairly common on US proof dies from 1836 to early 1900s. This was caused by the use of acid etch to create the frosting or satin surface on proof dies.  This anomaly is not observed on coins prior to 1836 because of the small number of proofs struck.
  

I would like to add the year 1836 was an important date because coinage was influenced after that year by technologies Franklin Peale learned at European Mints and applied these practices for coinage at the Philadelphia Mint. Apparently Peale didn’t learn how to prevent this or Mint officials there didn’t inform him.

 
 Pitting Corrosion 
Pitting corrosion, Craig goes on to say, occurred on dies as early as the 1800s and up thru the late 1880s.



Regarding the Encyclopedia, 
Chester Sullivan writes:


Last week I received my preprint manuscript draft of Dick Johnson's An Encyclopedia of Coin and Medal Technology.  Turning its pages provided me a whirlwind tour through fascinating and necessary information.  I urge all readers of  The E-Sylum to support his mammoth project.  And I'm eager to see the finished product.



For more information on Dick's book, see: 


NEW BOOK: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF COIN AND MEDAL TECHNOLOGY

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n17a05.html)



 

THE BOOK BAZARRE
OVER 500 NUMISMATIC TITLES: Wizard Coin Supply has over 500 numismatic titles in stock, competitively discounted, and
available for immediate shipment. See our selection at www.WizardCoinSupply.com.





DAVIDGE GAMBRILL (1836-1905)


John Lupia submitted the following information from his   Encyclopedic Dictionary of Numismatic Biographies for this week's installment of his series. Thanks! As always, this is an excerpt with the full article and bibliography available online. This week's subject is  South Carolina dealer Davidge Gambrill.  Thanks!
-Editor



Davidge Gambrill (1836-1905), was born August 8, 1836, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, son of Dr. Stevens Gambrill (1799-) and Elizabeth (1803- ). The distinguished Gambrill family also owned a farm in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The family name is often given variant spellings such as Gambrell, Gambril, &c.



            Davidge Gambrill became a broker and dealer in gold and silver coins, and broken bank bills and other paper money though his main business was as a stock and bond broker, real estate and insurance broker and agent. This combination of business venues except that of stock and bond broking was typical of many of the well-known northern coin dealers like Ebenezer Locke Mason, Jr., for example. The coin dealerships of the southern states from the 1860's to the 1890's remained closer associated to banking than in the northern states. Of course, we have a few exceptions like Luther Brown Tuthill, the renown Confederate note dealer.


            In 1864, he was drafted during the Civil War and is listed as working as a laborer at Annapolis Junction. 



            He moved to Charleston, South Carolina in 1866 as a broker of Phosphate of Lime and Mexican Guano, at Taft & Howard’s, Charleston, South Carolina.  In 1869, he moved to Columbia, South Carolina and worked as a specie coin and bank bills broker beginning in July.







He seems to have retired in the summer of 1875, although working occasionally since he is in the 1900 U. S. Census listed as a Broker and Insurance Agent. 


He died December 14, 1905 at his home 1219 Henderson, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina. He is buried at Trinity Episcopal Church Cemetery, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina.


To read the complete article, see: 


GAMBRILL, DAVIDGE

(https://sites.google.com/a/numismaticmall.com/www/numismaticmall-com/gambrill-davidge)

 








MORE ON CARLING GRESHAM




Last week's "Mystery Numismatist" was onetime editor of The Aslum Carling Gresham.  Here is more information on his tenure as editor from Joel Orosz' history (available on the NBS web site).
-Editor



President Wilson finally acted to shake the Society out of the doldrums, and found a figurative dynamo to serve as the new editor of The Asylum. Carling Gresham, a Florida dealer in numismatic ephemera, and an early enthusiast for the use of the personal computer, went to work with a will, and the first issue of The Asylum under his editorship was dated Summer, 1984. A colorful character, Gresham transformed the journal by adopting a chatty and informal style. He proved adept at inspiring new contributors; both Joel J. Orosz and Wayne Homren, for example, first published in The Asylum during Gresham's tenure. 


Carling also managed (with the aid of one double issue) to get the journal on a regular publishing schedule. His lively editorial comments skewered everyone; even co-founder Kolbe was not immune. When George moved from Mission Viejo to the higher elevation of Crestline, the editor delightedly referred to him as "Mountain Man Kolbe." The regular appearance of The Asylum sparked a revival in the fortunes of the Society, and membership began to grow. The second dawn for the NBS, however, was destined to have but a short life.


As much a part of Gresham as his energy and wit was his pride; and it was that pride that led him to be quick to utter and publish decided opinions. One such opinion, expressed about the editor of The Numismatist, caused a storm that ultimately cost Gresham his position. In an editorial appearing in the Summer, 1985 issue of The Asylum, Carling blasted off a salvo at the lack of coverage the NBS had received from hobby publications, concentrating his fire particularly on The Numismatist, " Where HRH [His Royal Highness] Harris [N. Neil Harris, editor/publisher] won't print anything about NBS!" Gresham went on: "HRH appears to be one of a number of employees at ANA Hq. who believe that we, collectors AND dealers are working for them NOT the other way around." (Gresham, as can be seen in the passage just quoted, was fond of capitalization for the purpose of placing emphasis on an idea.)


Reaction, and counter-reaction, was swift - and seething. In the following number (Fall & Winter, 1985), the issue was debated in no fewer than nine pages of letters. Large Cent stalwart Denis Loring wrote to say he was " incensed at the diatribe against Neil Harris " George Frederick Kolbe, by now NBS president, who had been copied on Loring's letter, wrote to say that he agreed with Loring's sentiments. Former president and current board member, Cal Wilson, who had also been copied by Loring, wrote to say that he had " sought out Neil Harris during the Baltimore [ANA] Convention, and on behalf of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society, offered our sincere apologies." 


Gresham printed all three letters, but responded in slashing style to each. Addressing Loring, he snapped "I reject you as a surrogate for HRH, and I reject your request for an apology." Gresham then suggested to Loring "Why don't you spend your time doing something creative for the NBS?" In response to Wilson's letter, Gresham accused him of groveling to Harris (who could offer publicity to Wilson's bibliopole business) and to Loring (who was one of Cal's major customers). Carling closed by snapping at Wilson: "Your patronizing attitude is very revulsive to me, but I understand the economics of your position."


This tart exchange was the last straw for Wilson, who on December 9, 1985 sent a letter to all board members recommending that Gresham be relieved of his duties and replaced by Joel J. Orosz, a charter member of the NBS who was then a museum curator. The board decided that Gresham should edit the first issue of 1986, with Orosz to take the reins for the remaining three. There followed instead an interregnum of several months, during which time no issue appeared, and the files of The Asylum, which were to have been transferred between the outgoing and incoming editors, were transferred only belatedly, and partially. As the summer of 1986 arrived, no issue of The Asylum had been produced for three-quarters of a year. Once again, the NBS appeared to be all but defunct.


During the next two years, the NBS did yet another imitation of Lazarus. Once again, the renaissance of the Society was led by the regular appearance of its journal. Editor Orosz managed to deliver it on time from the summer of 1986 through the summer of 1988. In fact, he became the first editor of The Asylum to produce four separate issues in a single calendar year (1987). This dependable publishing feat, however, was always a skin-of-the-teeth affair. Copy was in perpetually short supply, leading Orosz to write both a "From the Editor" column at the beginning, and a "Last Word" column at the end of every issue. Even so, three of the eight numbers emitted during these two years were an anemic sixteen pages. To his credit, deposed editor Gresham contributed four articles during these two years, providing the margin between publishing and missing an issue on more than one occasion. And there were some truly important pieces published: Gresham on Don Jose Toribio Medina, and P.
  Scott Rubin on the discovery of the 1907 ANA sale, for example. 


Alan Luedeking writes:


You asked for more thoughts on Carling Gresham. Although I never knew him personally, or even talked to him, I held him in high esteem for the respect in which I held his work. A prime example of this was his seminal study on the numismatic works of José Toribio Medina, published in 1985-86, in Vol. III, Nos. 3 & 4 and Vol. IV Nos. 1 & 2 of The Asylum, which, in his own words, was a rewrite of the article that first appeared in the NI Bulletin, November, 1983. From this excellent and meticulous study, I wish I had known him personally.



To read the complete NBS History, see: 


A History of the NBS

(www.coinbooks.org/about/)


To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


MYSTERY NUMISMATIST: CARLING GRESHAM

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a16.html)
 



THE BOOK BAZARRE

High quality coin supplies & other numismatic accessories. Use coupon
"coinbooks10" for an instant 10% OFF discount!





MORE ON HALL OF FAME FOR GREAT AMERICANS MEDALS 



Dave Lange writes:



Regarding the Hall of Fame medals, I've never acquired any of these, but I've been trying to locate the display album for them for many years now. If past experience is any predictor, I may have to buy the album complete with medals, as I've done this for several of the Medallic Art Company albums printed by Whitman.


Both the HOF medals and the album were distributed by the Coin & Currency Institute, which was the publishing division of Robert Friedberg's Capitol Coin Company. The entire line of medals and the album were sold through his chain of department store coin counters during the 1960s. The medal series kicked off in the fall of 1962, with the album following some time later. 


I'm attaching a couple of ads from The Numismatist that illustrate this promotion. The second is a two-page spread that also lists the department stores then part of the Friedberg concessions.










Thanks!  I've seen the medals individually, but wasn't aware of the album.   As Dave says, I'm sure they exist somewhere.
As a bibliophile, I'm now curious about the 192-page Hall of Fame Handbook offered for $1 in one of the ads.  It says it includes bios and images of the busts, but I wonder if there is also any information about the medals.   Copies are available for sale online in multiple editions over many years, with a reprint in 2013.
-Editor



Rich Jewell writes:


You asked if any readers had a complete set of this series, well I have to admit that I own a complete set. The 3" in bronze, and the 1-3/4" in bronze and silver. I completed the collection in 2007.


One interesting aspect of the Medal series was it was open to the initial sculptors who did the bronze bust to do the medals.


Eight sculptor/engravers answered the call:


Granville Carter did the Jane Addams- sculptor & medal


Stanley Martneau did the Alexander Graham Bell- sculptor & medal
Stanley Martineau did the Josiah Willard Gibbs- sculptor & medal


Walker Hancock did the Stephen C. Foster- sculptor & medal


Joseph Kiselewski did the Oliver Wendell Holmes,Jr-sculptor & medal
Joseph Kiselewski did the Sylvanus Thayer- sculptor & medal


C. Paul Jennewein did the Edward MacDowell-sculptor & medal


Laura Gardin Fraser did the sculpture of Gilbert C. Stuart and she and K. Gruppe are credited with doing the medal


Malvina Hoffman did the Henry David Thoreau-sculptor & medal


Paul Fjelde did the Orville Wright bust (only) and the medal




Rich Jewell adds:



 I do not have the album. What I do have is the book the NYU Press published in 1962 (The Hall of Fame for Great Americans at New York University) edited by Theodore Morello. It is one hundred ninety-two pages with photos of the busts, biographies of the awardees and diagrams of the colonnade and the layouts of the busts through June of 1961. Truly a great old book.


The book does not deal with the medals at all. The medals didn't start until 1963, a good two years after this book was published. Other information from the book lists the year the individuals were elected to the HoF, names that were not chosen by the committees, sculptors of the busts, the college of electors from 1900 through 1960 and donors of the busts, just to name some additional information.




One can hope, I guess - perhaps later editions have something on the medals.
-Editor



To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: 


HALL OF FAME FOR GREAT AMERICANS MEDALS

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n23a23.html)
 









ANA SUMMER SEMINAR COURSE ON MEDALS



David Menchell writes:


David Alexander and I will be teaching a course on Medals and Medal Collecting at the American Numismatic Association Summer Seminar.  The course will cover a range of topics from how to describe the various features of medals to their manufacture, and will include an historical survey of medals and engravers from the Renaissance to modern times.




I wish I could be there.  Here's the course description.
-Editor



29. Introduction to Medals and Medal Collecting
“Introduction to Medals” opens with the birth of the medal during the Renaissance through artists such as Antonio Pisano. From Italy the medal crossed the Alps into Austria, Germany, the Netherlands, France and England. Students will be introduced to medals of the wars of religion, and the medallic history of French King Louis XIV, Britain’s Queen Anne and French Emperor Napoleon I. The role of the Paris and Philadelphia Mints in creating early American medals will be explored, along with medals such as Comitia Americana pieces of the Revolution, military and presidential medals and sculptural art medals. 


Topics include the evolution of medal production, the role of engravers and sculptors, dating, patination, reference books and catalogs, medal preservation and storage, grading, and determining value. Instructors: David T. Alexander, founder of Medal Collectors of America, prolific author including the award winning book, American Art Medals, 1909-1995, Circle of Friends of the Medallion and Society of Medalists; and David Menchell, president of the Medal Collectors of America, ANA district representative, exhibit judge and award-winning exhibitor



There are two sessions of the Summer seminar, running from June 18-23 and June 25-30.   Good luck to all attending.   Some other courses of note include Steve Roach on Numismatic Publishing, the Coins of Colonial America (1535-1800) by John Kraljevich and Erik Goldstein, and Digital Numismatic Photography for Collectors by Robert Kelley.
-Editor



For more information, see: 


https://www.money.org/summer-seminar





MEDAL COLLECTORS OF AMERICA 2016 MEETING


It's not too soon to begin making plans for the American Numismatic Association's World's Fair of Money August 9-13, 2016.  I've already made my reservations and hope to see many E-Sylum readers there.  


Tony Lopez submitted this press release for the Medal Collectors of America Annual Meeting on Thursday, August 11.
Thanks.
-Editor









The Medal Collectors of America Annual Meeting
American Numismatic Association - World’s Fair of Money
Thursday, August 11, 2016
2:00 PM
Anaheim Hilton Hotel
Huntington A Meeting Room



No matter what we collect, we have to organize our holdings and present them somehow. This requires
tools and materials that are not found in a traditional coin shop. Scales and calipers, nippers and scissors,
card stock and poster-board are all found at other stores around town. Using a sonic sealer to best
advantage, or coming up with a way to present and store hanging badges or military awards are also
explored. This presentation is full of tips and techniques the presenter has developed over his years of


Bob started collecting coins in 1968 while stationed in Japan with the United States Navy. Subsequent
assignments in Germany, Scotland, and Spain, along with several Mediterranean cruises added to his core
collections of circulating coins of countries visited. Following retirement from the Navy, Bob started
collecting New Hampshire town medals, medals of the New England Numismatic Association, elongated
coins, woods, Hard Times Tokens, Mardi Gras Doubloons, ancients, state quarters, “classic” US
commemoratives, and certain European art and historical medals. He has held numerous active leadership
roles in numismatics, and as a member of nearly 50 coin clubs, Bob has served on the Board for several
and President of six. We are proud to have him sit on the Board of Directors of the MCA. Bob’s proudest
achievements include serving as Assistant General Manager of the 2010 Boston World’s Fair of Money
and sitting as a member of the New Hampshire State Quarter Committee.


The Medal Collectors of America is an ANA Member club for collectors of world and U.S. art and
historical medals. Contact us and we’ll send you a complimentary copy of the latest issue of our club
publication, the MCA Advisory. It is guaranteed to be a “good read” if you set aside an hour to enjoy it.
Our purpose of course is to entice you to join others who love numismatic history, research, and medals
worldwide from medieval times to the present. For more information, or to join MCA, email us at

medalcollectors at gmail.com or visit us at 

www.medalcollectors.org.










1970-S QUARTER STRUCK ON 1941 CANADA QUARTER


Rich Bottles forwarded this Yahoo video story headlined "This Quarter May Be Worth Much More Than You Think".  His subject line was "More poor numismatic reporting"







With tongue firmly in cheek I replied, "Well, it is quite rare - how many coins do you know with an obverse larger than the reverse?"


The story is based on an eBay offering of a rare error, and it managed to go viral this week.  Dave Bowers forwarded a version of the story found by Lee Bowers on MSN, and Dick Hanscom sent a version found at the Daily Mail.
-Editor



To read the complete article, see: 


This Quarter May Be Worth Much More Than You Think

(www.yahoo.com/news/quarter-may-worth-much-more-175047736.html)



The internet mythbusting web site Snopes.com did a nice job covering this story, rightly declaring it a mixture of fact and fiction.  While the coin is a legitimate error and is indeed worth a considerable sum, the chances of anyone finding another in circulation are nil.
-Editor



CLAIM: A handful of 1970s quarters are worth a fortune, as they were minted on the back of a 1941 Canadian coin.


MIXTURE


WHAT'S TRUE: A 1970-s proof quarter struck on the back of a 1941 Canadian coin was listed on eBay for $35,000.


WHAT'S FALSE: The coin did not enter circulation.


EXAMPLE: [Collected via e-mail, June 2016]


I read that old 1970 quarters are worth thousands now because they have a small 1941 number above the word Liberty on the back. Supposedly it's from Canadian quarters that were reused as American ones.



ORIGIN:An article published on Woman's World on 31 May 2016 described a rare U.S. quarter from 1970 that was purportedly minted by accident on the back of a Canadian coin:


We all have loose change sitting around, despite our promises to ourselves to roll 'em and bring 'em to the bank--or at least deposit them in one of those sorting machines. And while it's no surprise that many 200-year-old coins are worth more than the standard value, some 1970 quarters could be worth far more than 25 cents.


How much more? How about a yearly salary's worth!



The article quoted above is based on an eBay listing for a "1970-S Proof Washington Quarter Struck on 1941 Canada Quarter NGC PF 65." The coin is currently listed by Mike Byers, Inc. for USD$35,000.







According to the eBay listing, Byers obtained this rare coin from a California state auction:


This unique 1970-S Proof Quarter from the United States was over struck on a 1941 Quarter from Canada. This mint error was originally discovered in group of San Francisco Proof Errors that was auctioned by the State of California. There is a significant amount of detail on both sides showing the design of the Canadian Quarter. This is one of the most fascinating and intriguing proof mint errors ever discovered.



While Byers has a long history of buying and selling mint error coins, many appeared skeptical about this eBay listing, largely because there seems to be no practical reason that a 1970 United States quarter would be minted in the same place as a 1941 Canada quarter. While third-party coin certification company Numismatic Guaranty Corporation couldn't provide the reason the coin was created, they did confirm to us that it was legitimate



Snopes included these nice composite photos from Mike Byers' eBay listing showing the undercoin.  Ya gotta look close, but the design is there.  As always, you can click on the photo to see a larger version in our E-Sylum Flickr archive.  Great error coin!  
-Editor



Lee Bowers noted:


It's a "Fun reason for non-collectors to start checking their change for that "needle in the haystack". A great "coin collecting awareness" story for the general public.













To read the complete Snopes article, see: 


Coinstruck

(www.snopes.com/1970-quarter-ebay-canada/)


To read the complete MSN article, see:

Rare batch of 1970 quarters worth much more than 25 cents

(www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/rare-batch-of-1970-quarters-worth-much-more-than-25-cents/ar-AAgPLg3?li=BBnb7Kz)


To read the complete Daily Mail article, see:

Is your quarter worth $35,000? Rare 1970 proof coin containing faint trace of the year '1941' goes on sale... but you'll need to be very 'eagle'-eyed to spot minting error

(www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3633476/Is-quarter-worth-35-000-Rare-1970-proof-coin-containing-faint-trace-year-1941-goes-sale.html)


To read the complete eBay description, see: 


1970-S Proof Washington Quarter Struck on 1941 Canada Quarter NGC PF 65

(www.ebay.com/itm/1970-S-Proof-Washington-Quarter-Struck-on-1941-Canada-Quarter-NGC-PF-65-/272270412047?)





CLANDESTINE STRIKE: 1970-S PROOF QUARTER ERROR


Numismatic News editor Dave Harper addresses the elephant in the room regarding the 1970-S proof quarter in the news this week.
Is it legit?
-Editor




Security at the U.S. Mint coining facilities is tight. Every so often we see an example that demonstrates it is not tight enough.


A Proof-65 1970-S quarter has been posted as a Buy It Now item on eBay for $35,000.


The price is making headlines and generating interest among collectors.


The reason the asking price is so high is it is struck on a silver 1941 Canadian 25-cent piece.


It is a major wrong planchet error.


In this case it appears that an employee 46 years ago did wrong and was never caught.


This clandestine strike was not part of normal Mint production. There is no way that a Canadian quarter of 1941 could have found its way to a San Francisco coin press striking proofs without help.


It had to be deliberately made.


This would require a Canadian quarter to be smuggled in. It was then overstruck and smuggled out. Or, I suppose, proof dies could have somehow been smuggled out, for use elsewhere, but that seems less likely.


Now this is no reflection on the current seller, Mike Byers has done everything above board. He is a respected error expert and dealer in the United States.


He also provides information that would make any potential buyer sleep well at night.


In the description Byers notes that the “error” was part of a small group of proof errors that were part of a collection. The Secret Service looked at the collection and released it back to the State of California for auction.


A buyer would have a coin that seems to be absolutely clean going forward despite what appears to be murky origins. In fact, the likelihood of funny business probably enhances its value.


Is it worth $35,000?


We’ll have to wait and see.


To read the complete article, see: 


Are you a buyer at $35,000?

(www.numismaticnews.net/buzz/are-you-a-buyer-at-35000)










Archives International Auctions, Part XXXIII


Chinese, Asian & Worldwide Banknotes, 

and Chinese Scripophily


June 28, 2016








Click the links! Highlights include:



Lot 198: American-Oriental Banking Corporation, 1919 “Shanghai Branch”




Lot 245: Dah Chon Chang Money Exchange, ca.1920's "Shanghai" 




Lot 315: Republik Indonesia Unlisted 1948 Issue Essay Specimen




Lot 451: Banco de Portugal - Azores. 1909 Issue




Lot 475: Imperial Do Brazil (1882) Issue Color Trial Essay Proof 




Lot 700: Comite Bancario de Guatemala. 1899 Issue




Lot 889: Bank of Rhodesia & Nyasaland. 1960 Issue.




Lot 1006: Central Bank of Turkey. 1930 Law Issue






Live Internet Bidding
              
              View the Virtual Catalog
              
              
              Download the Catalog in PDF format
              
              
              ARCHIVES INTERNATIONAL AUCTIONS, LLC
              
              1580 Lemoine Avenue, Suite #7
              
              Fort Lee, NJ 07024
              
              Phone: 201-944-4800
              
              Email: info at archivesinternational.com
              
              WWW.ARCHIVESINTERNATIONAL.COM







1942 EXPERIMENTAL CENT OFFERED


A June 8, 2016 Stack's Bowers blog article by James McCartney highlights an interesting experimental U.S. coin being offered in the firm's August 2016 Anaheim ANA World's Fair of Money Auction.
-Editor








​The years during and surrounding World War II were an era of inventiveness and ingenuity among manufacturers in the United States, the result of shortages that threatened the availability of previously abundant raw materials. The Mint was not spared from this rationing, and in 1942 it began a search for materials to substitute for copper in the Lincoln cent, as copper was among the most valuable metals to the wartime effort. Independent manufacturers submitted samples of proposed substitutes, which included various metal alloys, plastics and even glass. 


Though the Mint ultimately decided to utilize zinc-coated steel for the 1943 cents, durability testing performed on plastic samples by the National Bureau of Standards (NSB) allowed insight as to how some of these materials might have performed if they had been chosen. It is one of these plastic pieces, Judd-2062, Pollock-4045, that will be featured in our August 2016 Official Auction of the ANA World's Fair of Money in Anaheim.


Called "reddish brown plastic" by Pollock, variegated cinnamon and deep mahogany hues paint each side of this experimental cent. Though the pulp filler delivers a lightly fibrous texture, the piece remains glossy overall. The previously severed halves have been neatly united, with just the faintest traces of glue residue visible under magnification. Calculated marks are spotted at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o'clock on the reverse—likely positioning marks from the NSB tests--and the characters E-1 are engraved in the upper field.


As quoted by Roger Burdette in United States Pattern & Experimental Pieces of WW-II (2012), the NSB report presented to the Bureau of the Mint on December 22, 1942 notes that specimens provided by Durez Plastics and Chemicals, Inc. were given the sample designation E, alluding to the provenance of the present example. The same report outlines an Impact Strength Test in Table 9 that evaluates a specimen "1" from sample E, employing an Izod-style test that strikes specimens until fracture. Without much imagination, it could be suggested that the present "E-1" example was severed in this U.S. Government-regulated evaluation. Burdette also plates this piece on page 171 in the aforementioned work where he notes that 50 to 100 samples of the RB 42-57 type were sent to the Mint, and at least a dozen were provided to NBS for testing. 


To read the complete article, see: 


Intriguing 1942 Experimental Cent to be offered in our August 2016 Official Auction of the ANA World’s Fair of Money in Anaheim

(www.stacksbowers.com/News/Pages/Blogs.aspx?ArticleID=2127)










LYN KNIGHT JUNE 2016 AUCTION SALE HIGHLIGHTS


Joel Shafer of Lyn Knight Currency Auctions forwarded this set of highlights from their upcoming sale. Thanks. 
-Editor



While the Live sessions are robust throughout, areas of particular strength include Algeria, Austria, Colombia, France, Germany, Honduras, Hungary, India, Iran, Russia, Scotland, Spain, and Venezuela.  Honduras includes a type never previously offered publicly; two incredible notes from Switzerland must be mentioned.  Lots can be viewed and bids made at 

lynknight.com.  The auction schedule is as follows:


Memphis Knight Live auction schedule




Session 1   Tuesday, June 14 at 10 AM (Central Time)  World Notes:  Afghanistan thru Denmark

Session 2   Tuesday, June 14 at 5 PM (Central Time)  World Notes:  Djibouti thru Honduras

Session 3   Wednesday, June 15 at 10 AM (Central Time)  World Notes:  Hungary thru Philippines

Session 4   Wednesday, June 15 at 5 PM (Central Time)  World Notes:  Portugal thru Miscellaneous Countries

Session 5   Thursday, June 16 at 10 AM (Central Time)   US:  Large Size Type, Fractionals, Nationals

Session 6   Thursday, June 16 at 5 PM (Central Time)   US:  Obsolete, Confederate, Colonial, Continental, Depression Scrip, MPC, Panic Scrip, Vignettes, Checks, Stamps, Miscellaneous

Session 7   Friday, June 17 at 10 AM (Central Time)  US:  Errors & Small Size Type


 Lot 3090: Austria 96 50 Schilling 2.1.1929





To read the complete lot description, see: 


96 50 Schilling 2.1.1929

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=270056)

 Lot 3106: Bahamas 14a 10 Shillings ND (1953)





To read the complete lot description, see: 


14a 10 Shillings ND (1953)

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269804)


 Lot 3283: Colombia 164 1 Peso 6.10.1885 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


164 1 Peso 6.10.1885

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269211)


 Lot 3359: East Caribbean States d1 100 Dollars ND (1988-93) 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


25d1 100 Dollars ND (1988-93)

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=268950)


 Lot 3539:  French India 7s?/J 13.5.4 50 Roupies ND (1936) 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


7s?/J 13.5.4 50 Roupies ND (1936)

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269672)


 Lot 3718: Honduras NL 1 Peso 20.4.1880 






To read the complete lot description, see: 


NL 1 Peso 20.4.1880

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=270813)


 Lot 3759: India 47f/J 6.9.3.1 1000 Rupees ND 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


47f/J 6.9.3.1 1000 Rupees ND

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=270365)


 Lot 3770: Iran 7? 50 Tomans ND (ca. 1890-1923) 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


7? 50 Tomans ND (ca. 1890-1923)

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269327)


 Lot 3936: Madagascar 49b? 5000 Francs 00-00-0000 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


49b? 5000 Francs 00-00-0000

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269671)


 Lot 4242: Scotland 259d 5 Pounds 1.12.1955 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


259d 5 Pounds 1.12.1955

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=266418)


 Lot 4354: Switzerland 23? 25 Franken 9.9.1914 





To read the complete lot description, see: 


23? 25 Franken 9.9.1914

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=269679)


 Lot 4391: Upper Senegal & Niger 1a .50 Franc D. 11.2.1917 






To read the complete lot description, see: 


1a .50 Franc D. 11.2.1917

(www.lynknight.com/ShowAuctionDetails.Asp?auction_Id=266496)










FIND IN ISRAEL MAY INCLUDE EARLY COIN COLLECTION


David Gladfelter forwarded this article from The Times of Israel about a new coin find that appears to include a grouping assembled by an early numismatist.  Thanks!
-Editor



A treasure trove of 2,150-year-old silver coins excavated in the central Israeli city of Modiin apparently belonged to a Jew who had to leave the nearby house but never managed to retrieve his hidden cache.


Excavation director Abraham Tendler said the shekels and half-shekels (tetradrachms and didrachms) were minted in the city of Tyre, now part of Lebanon, and bear the images of the king, Antiochus VII, and his brother Demetrius II.


The finds, discovered prior to the building of a new neighborhood in the city, will be displayed in an archaeological park in the heart of that neighborhood, the Antiquities Authority confirmed.


The discovery of the silver coins provided “compelling evidence that one of the members of the estate who had saved his income for months needed to leave the house for some unknown reason. He buried his money in the hope of coming back and collecting it, but was apparently unfortunate and never returned. It is exciting to think that the coin hoard was waiting here 2,140 years until we exposed it.”


Dr. Donald Tzvi Ariel, head of the Coin Department at the antiquities authority, said the cache contained one or two coins from every year between 135 and 126 BCE.


“It seems that some thought went into collecting the coins, and it is possible that the person who buried the cache was a coin collector. He acted in just the same way as stamp and coin collectors manage collections today,” he added.


Numerous bronze coins minted by the Hasmonean kings were also discovered in the excavation in addition to the 16 silver ones, the authority reported.


They bear the names of kings such as Yehohanan, Judah, Jonathan or Mattathias and his title: High Priest and Head of the Council of the Jews.


To read the complete article, see: 


Cache of Hasmonean-era silver coins uncovered in Modiin

(www.timesofisrael.com/cache-of-hasmonean-era-silver-coins-uncovered-in-modiin/)


 
This article is the first I found with images of any of the coins.
-Editor








To read the complete article, see: 


Rare Coins from Chashmona’im Period Found in Modi’in Excavation

(http://hamodia.com/2016/06/07/rare-coins-chashmonaim-period-found-modiin-excavation/)









THE TYNEMOUTH EXTENSION MEDAL 


We recently discussed Anthony Paquet's gold Lifesaving Medal of the First Class, with its amazing high-relief seascape image.  Here's another lifesaving medal featuring a seascape that's coming up for sale June 14, 2016.  The Tynemouth medal is named for Tynemouth, England, a town at the mouth of the river Tyne (makes sense now, doesn't it?).
-Editor




A rare medal presented to an extraordinary life-saver more than 90 years ago is going under the hammer.


Charles Alfred Hill Porter was just 18 when he was awarded the Tynemouth Extension Medal for his bravery when he rescued a girl of around the same age from the sea at Tynemouth in 1922. As well as his life-saving exploits, Charles, from Wolsingham, County Durham, was a keen Himalayan mountain climber and was one of the first Englishmen to climb Mont Blanc, without oxygen or a mountain guide.


His daughter, Helen Holmes, from Rothbury, Northumberland, said: “He was a young man and he didn’t think he’d done anything untoward. As a character, he was very self-effacing."


His medal is being auctioned as part of the Anderson & Garland Fine Art Sale on June 14 and 15. The medal is dated 11th August 1922 and inscribed ‘Palmam Qui Meruit’ around a view of King Edward’s Bay, Tynemouth, with a blue ribbon and hanging bar. It is in its original box.


One hundred silver Tynemouth medals were originally made at the request of New York lawyer, EB Convers after he witnessed a rescue in Tynemouth. He was so impressed with the heroism commissioned 100 silver medals to be awarded to people saving lives on Tyneside and Tynesiders saving lives elsewhere.


Once they had all been presented, the ‘Extension’ medals were created.


The medal has an estimated value of £400 although Tynemouth medals have sold for more than £1,000 in the past.





The Tynemouth  and Paquet Lifesaving Medals




So who designed, engraved and struck this medal?  If it was paid for by a New Yorker, was it made in America?  Anyone know?
-Editor



To read the complete article, see: 


Rare Tynemouth life-saving medal is going under the hammer

(http://www.itv.com/news/tyne-tees/2016-06-08/rare-tynemouth-life-saving-medal-is-going-under-the-hammer/)


To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see: 


GOLD LIFESAVING MEDAL OF THE FIRST CLASS

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n19a13.html)
 

MORE ON THE GOLD LIFESAVING MEDAL OF THE FIRST CLASS

(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n20a18.html)




THE BOOK BAZARRE

 SEARCH & SAVE: Nickels.  
A new book/folder from Whitman Publishing: 64 pages of colorful history and collecting tips, plus a heavy cardstock album page to start your collection of 16 different kinds of nickels (in the Shield, Liberty Head, Buffalo, and Jefferson types). Ideal for young collectors or new hobbyists. Get yours today for $9.95
at 
Whitman.com
, or call 1-800-546-2995.





THE NEW ZEALAND GALLANTRY STAR MEDAL


This article  describes the amazing heroism of a New Zealand Army major in protecting refugees.  I don't think we've pictured one of the these medals before.
-Editor




A New Zealand army major has received a rarely-given award for bravery from Prince Charles at Buckingham Palace.


Major Geoffrey Faraday, of the Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps, is just the third person to receive the New Zealand Gallantry Star.


He was working in South Sudan as a military liaison officer for the United Nations in April 2014 when an armed mob approached a UN-protected refugee camp with 5000 people.


Major Faraday faced down the gang of about 250 when it breached the camp perimeter and began to attack the occupants with rifles and machetes.


The attack left 53 civilians dead.


Major Faraday was also recognised for fending off an attack on three barges carrying food and fuel for the same UN mission.


To read the complete article, see: 


Rare medal for bravery awarded to NZ major

(www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/306133/rare-medal-for-bravery-awarded-to-nz-major)










THE FIRST VICTORIA CROSS AWARDED TO A MUSLIM


Lord Ashcroft makes the market for Victoria Cross medals, exhibiting his massive collection at the Imperial War Museum in London.  In this article he discusses one of his newest acquisitions, the first Victoria Cross Awarded to a Muslim.
-Editor




As my collection of Victoria Crosses (VCs) nears the 200 mark, I am delighted to reveal that I have become the custodian of a particularly special medal group.


I have purchased the gallantry and service medals that were awarded to Subadar (equivalent to a captain) Khudadad Khan. He was the very first Muslim to be awarded Britain and the Commonwealth’s most prestigious decoration for bravery and his medal group will soon go on public display at the Imperial War Museum, London.


Khan, who was also the first Indian soldier to be awarded the VC, was awarded his decoration when, while serving as a sepoy (equivalent to a private), he displayed exceptional gallantry in battle early in the First World War.


In a world in which a tiny minority of Muslims – notably those fighting for ISIS and those extremists responsible for terrorists acts around the world – tarnish their religion, this is a wonderful time for us to recognise the many, many loyal and brave Muslims who have risked, and sometimes given, their lives for Britain, its allies and for wider freedoms.


Make no mistake, Muslims made an immense contribution to the Allied effort during the Great War, and beyond. Of the 1.3 million Indians who volunteered to serve the Empire during the 1914-18 global conflict, approximately 400,000 were Muslims.


Khan had been born on October 26 1888 in Jhelum, Punjab, India (now Pakistan). He had enlisted as a sepoy in the 129th Duke of Connaught’s Own Baluchis, Indian Army, on August 3 1914 at a time when the regiment was recruiting on the North-West Frontier.


Initially, Khan had been sent to the Suez Canal Zone but he was then diverted to France because of the desperate need for more troops. On October 18 1914, he moved with the Ferozepore Brigade from Orleans, France, to be attached to the British Cavalry Corps that was attempting to hold the line between Zandvoorde and Ploegsteert Wood, Belgium. On 22 October, his regiment joined the 3rd Cavalry Brigade.


As the battle raged on October 31, Khan shrugged off his serious injuries and continued to work his gun as German shells reined down on the six men. One by one, Havildar Ghulam Mahomed, Sepoy Lal Sher, Sepoy Said Ahmed, Sepoy Kassib and Sepoy Afsar Khan were killed by enemy fire.


Before his position was finally overrun by the Germans, Khan put the machine-gun out of action so that the much-prized weapon did not fall into enemy hands. As the enemy advanced, he initially feigned death but he eventually crawled back to rejoin his company and receive medical assistance.


Khan’s VC was announced in the London Gazette on December 7 1914 and he received his decoration under the terms of the Royal Warrant of 1911, which extended the reward to native troops. Previously Indians who showed exceptional gallantry received the Indian Order of Merit (First Class). The other five men manning the second machine-gun on October 31 received a different but lesser posthumous gallantry award.


Initially, Khan was too weak to attend his planned investiture but he eventually received his VC from King George V at Buckingham Palace on January 26, 1915.


To read the complete article, see: 


Lord Ashcroft: Why I feel so privileged to take possession of the first Victoria Cross awarded to a Muslim

(www.conservativehome.com/platform/2016/06/lord-ashcroft-why-i-feel-so-privileged-to-take-possession-of-the-first-vc-awarded-to-a-muslim.html)





 



HARPERS FERRY QUARTER LAUNCHED


Sadly, I was unable to attend this week's launch ceremony for the new Harpers Ferry quarter, a short drive away in  Harpers Ferry, WV (June 8, 2016).  Luckily some E-Sylum readers were in attendance at one of the largest such events held to date.  First, an excerpt from the US. Mint press release.
-Editor




The United States Mint (Mint) joined the National Park Service (NPS) today to officially launch the America the Beautiful Quarters® Program coin honoring Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. 


The coin's reverse design features John Brown's Fort, the site of John Brown's last stand during his raid on the Harpers Ferry Armory.


"This new coin serves as a reminder that at a river-crossing established long before our country's struggle for independence, in a West Virginia town that played an integral role in our nation's Civil War, a diverse number of people and events came together to influence the course of our common history," said William Norton, United States Mint Director of Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs.




Crowdshot from Mint New Blog



Basketball Olympic Gold Medalist Vicky Bullett served as master of ceremonies for the event held at Lower Town located within the site. Additional participants included United States Mint Artistic Infusion Program designer Thomas Hipschen, the coin's designer; NPS Regional Director Bob Vogel; Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Superintendent Rebecca Harriett; Keith McIntosh on behalf of U.S. Senator Joe Manchin III; Chris Strovel on behalf of U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito; and Dr. Steve Smoot on behalf of U.S. Representative Alex Mooney.


The ceremony culminated in the Mint's customary coin exchange in which the public traded their cash for $10 rolls of newly minted Harpers Ferry National Historical Park quarters. The Mint also hosted a coin forum the evening before the launch ceremony, where local residents gathered to express their views about future coinage and learn about upcoming Mint coin programs and initiatives.



These events are a great feature of the Mint's publicity campaign.  How cool is it to meet in person with the coin's designers?  How much would you give to go back in time for a similar event in 1907, 1836 or 1796?


Pat McBride and Tom Uram of the Pennsylvania Association of Numismatists drove down for the day.  Here are some photos they shared; "we were taking pictures like a bunch of Japanese tourists..."
-Editor



Eric Schena writes:


I went to the forum the Mint held the day before the launch. They had set up a tent on the green adjacent to Shenandoah Ave. in the lower part of the town. I would hazard a guess somewhere between 75 and 100 folks showed up, which is not bad at all for a Tuesday evening. 


The Mint's legislative director, Bill Norton, answered many of the audience members' questions regarding future possible coin series, the fate (if any) of the one cent coin, and what is role is as essentially the Mint's liaison to Congress. A native of Paw Paw, WV, he made mention of other design candidates, to include Seneca Rocks and New River, but was pleased that Harper's Ferry was ultimately selected by the CCAC. 


The first 10 minutes or so were interrupted by a CSX coal train rumbling through - there is an active railroad line that runs right through the lower town - and he was amused by that. All in all, it was a worthwhile experience and I am glad I made that detour on my way home from work. 



Pat writes:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
at this address:
http://www.coinbooks.org/club_nbs_member_app.html

To join, print the application and return it with your check
to the address printed on the application. Membership is only
$15 to addresses in the U.S., $20 for First Class mail, and
$25 elsewhere.  For those without web access, write to:

David M. Sundman, Secretary/Treasurer
Numismatic Bibliomania Society,
P. O. Box 82 Littleton, NH 03561

For Asylum mailing address changes and other membership
questions, contact David at this email address:
dsundman at LittletonCoin.com

To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, just
Reply to this message, or write to the Editor at this
address: whomren at gmail.com <!-- at coinlibrary.com-->

Those wishing to become new E-Sylum subscribers
(or wishing to Unsubscribe) can go to the following web page:
https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum

All past E-Sylum issues are archived on the NBS web site at this address:
http://www.coinbooks.org/club_nbs_esylum_archive.html

Issues from September 2002 to date are also archived at this address:
http://my.binhost.com/pipermail/esylum

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.binhost.com/pipermail/esylum/attachments/20160612/b3bc63ea/attachment.html>


More information about the Esylum mailing list