Want to hear a good story? Yeah, I thought
you did. A little less than a century ago a
collector named William Woodin made a deal to
buy two coins. The price was outrageous and
unprecedented (reportedly $10,000 per coin), but
he agreed to pay it. Then, after Mr. Woodin took
delivery of the coins the seller changed his
mind. "I must have them back," the seller cried,
"for they are unique national treasures."
Mr. Woodin wasn't happy about it, so the
seller offered to trade him other coins. Two
trunks filled with coins, in fact. United States
Pattern coins, in fact. So, the only two $50
Half Union pieces ever struck in gold were
returned to the National Collection, and Mr.
Woodin suddenly owned the largest collection of
U. S. Patterns ever held by a private citizen.
At a later date Mr. Woodin went on to become
Secretary of the Treasury of the United States,
but that's politics, and definitely something
you don't need to hear more about these
days.
Because the U. S. government reneged on its
agreement to sell the two 1877 Half Unions they
are not available today for private ownership.
It is speculated that they might be the most
valuable coins in the world, but it's something
we'll never know. The good news is that there
were some off-metal Pattern coins struck from
the same dies, and one of them is coming up for
sale in the Bowers & Merena Rarities
Sale on January 3, 2001. Lot #633 of the
sale offers a PCGS Proof 63 specimen that is one
of eight known. The huge Pattern is gilt copper,
as are five of the eight known pieces from this
die pair. It is often said that this coin has a
rich history, but that's almost an
understatement. The 1877 Half Union is a
numismatic classic, to be sure, but it nearly
became the most famous coin in the world. To
view lots and participate in on-line bidding in
the Bowers & Merena Rarities Sale,
click here.
Market for modern issues is
expanding.
"Franklin half dollars and Walking Liberty
half dollars have joined the expanding modern
issues market," says Michael Byers of Byers
Numismatic Corporation in Lake Forest,
California. "The Proof sets of 1950 and later
have also come into great demand. There's an
abundance of new collectors in the market and
they're seeking affordable coins and series that
can be completed.
"Another excellent area of the market is Mint
errors," Byers continued. "Now that the major
errors are being certified they are universally
accepted as an important part of numismatics.
Collectors for errors are just like collectors
in other areas of the market in that they're
looking for completeness."
How do you "complete' a set of Mint errors?
For that matter, what makes up such a set?
"After the collector buys a Kennedy half dollar
struck on a quarter planchet he wants one struck
on a dime, a nickel and a cent planchet as
well," Byers explained. Among the more
interesting errors he's recently handled are the
first certified Sacagawea dollar on a Susan B.
Anthony planchet and (appropriately enough) a
Susan B Anthony dollar on a Sacagawea
planchet.
Money is "a little tight" for some
collectors and dealers.
"It's a buyer's market in some areas because
money is a little tight," says John L. Schuch of
John L. Schuch Rare Coins in Sacramento,
California. "Collectors and dealers are more
picky than ever about what they're buying. If
the coin isn't white or attractively toned it
can be a hard sell. Everyone is very price
conscious right now as well."
Are things really that bad? "Not bad. Don't
get me wrong," Schuch continued, "there's a lot
of action in collector coins in collector
grades, and pre-1940 Washington quarters are
hot. It's just that a number of coins that are
already cheap have to be discounted further in
order to move them."
Can you give us an example, John? "Walking
Liberty half dollars in MS65 and MS66 are really
undervalued. Yes, there are a lot of them, but
they're beautiful and a fantastic coin for the
price."
Bruce Amspacher
has been a professional writer since the 1950s
and a professional numismatist since the 1960s.
He won the OIPA sportswriting award in 1958 and
again in 1959, then spent eight years in college
studying American Literature. This background
somehow led him to become a professional
numismatist in 1968. Since then he has published
hundreds of articles on rare coins in dozens of
publications as well as publishing his own
newsletter, the “Bruce Amspacher Investment
Report,” for more than a decade. His areas of
expertise include Liberty Seated dollars, Morgan
and Peace dollars, United States gold coins,
sports trivia, Western history, modern
literature and the poetry of Emily Dickinson. In
1986 he was a co-founder of the Professional
Coin Grading Service (PCGS). Today he is a
full-time writer for Collectors Universe.
|
| One of America's most beautiful coins,
the Walking Liberty Half Dollar, is popular with
collectors |
|
|