Printed Auction 43

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Closed March 20, 2024
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  1. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A43, Lot 331:

    UNITED STATES. Indian head cent. 19 mm. 1878. PCGS MS63BN. Light colored marks in photo are in slab plastic, not coin.

  2. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A43, Lot 335:

    UNITED STATES. Standing Liberty quarter. 24 mm. 1917 Type I. PCGS MS63FH.

  3. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A43, Lot 336:

    UNITED STATES. Standing Liberty quarter. 24 mm. 1926-D. PCGS MS64; (Generation 3.1 tag).

  4. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A43, Lot 338:

    UNITED STATES. Peace dollar. 39 mm. 1921. PCGS MS63.

  5. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    Civil War tag; Ex Dr. Alan York Collection
    A43, Lot 348:

    UNITED STATES. Lincoln Emancipation Proclamation Medal. 1862. Bronze Civil war tag (holed). 13.41 gm. 31 mm. Bust of George Washington right; UNION below; thirty-four stars around, denticles at the rim / Legend punched in letter-by-letter: GRATE JOY TO OUR RACE around above running from 9 to 3; in six lines down the center: EMAN / CIPATION / BILL PASSED / APRIL 16 1862 / WASHINGTON / D. C. (Medal) Musante GW- 566 (Musante explains the reason for this issue in detail). Good Fine.

    Ex the Dr. Alan York Collection. Roland Auctions NY. New York. 19th May 2917. (York and his significant Americana collecting efforts are discussed in detail in various online articles.)

    This was created from a Civil War soldier's identification tag (Musante GW-565). The Emancipation Proclamation was signed on the first of January 1863 but Emancipation in Washington D.C. came eight-and-a-half months earlier as celebrated on this piece.

    The Musante examples have individual names as the legend around the top half. Those names may have been names of the original owners of the medals, freed slaves. The sale of the Baker Collection in Nov. 2019 offered a named piece noting that the cataloger was aware of 12 named examples (that piece sold for $14,400). Davissons, Auction 42, February 2023, sold an example without a specific name for $11,000 on an estimate of $1250.

  6. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    “I have not yet begun to fight!” (Ex John Adams Collection)
    A43, Lot 350:

    UNITED STATES. John Paul Jones. (Comitia Americana). Silver medal. 85.55 gm. 56 mm. By F. Dupre. Restrike by Paris Mint after 1880. Bust right of John Paul Jones; COMITIA AMERICANA below; JOANNI PAVLO JONES—CLASSIS PRAEFECTO around / The combat with the Serapis; HOSTIVM NAVIBUS CAPTIS AVT FVGATIS around above; AD ORAM SCOTIAE XXIII SEPT MDCCLXXVIIII below; DUPRE F below. Betts 568. BHM 222. Good Extremely Fine.

    Ex John Adams Collection: Stacks Bowers 11/14/2019.

    Captain John Paul Jones (1747-92), commander of the U.S.S. Bonhomme Richard, leading a combined French and American fleet, on September 23, 1779 off the Yorkshire coast near Flamborough Head and the town of Bridlington, engaged a large Baltic merchant fleet escorted by two British ships, the H.M.S. Serapis and the smaller Countess of Scarborough. Early on in the battle, the hull and rigging of the Bonhomme Richard were damaged and the American flag fell, leading Captain Richard Pearson of the Serapis to ask Jones if he wished to surrender. Jones defiantly proclaimed: “I have not yet begun to fight!” and went on to win the day. His rallying cry made him a national hero. The following day the badly crippled Bonhomme Richard sank. 

    This beautiful medal has the distinction of being the only naval medal authorized by the Continental Congress. And John Paul Jones became a Revolutionary War era hero who inspired American school children for generations.

  7. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    The War of Jenkins Ear
    A43, Lot 353:

    GREAT BRITAIN. George II. 1727-1760. Copper/copper alloy medal. 5.54 gm. 26.2 mm. Admiral Vernon, three-quarter length, standing half left with ADMIRAL VERNON TOOK PORTO BELLO around / Six ships—three in harbor and three approaching; semicircular harbor with town and forts behind; WITH SIX SHIPS ONLY NOV 22 1739. Adams & Chao PBv 16-M (page 60). Betts 194. Good Very Fine; small bit of edge missing at 4 obverse.

     

    The War of Jenkins Ear

    Admiral Vernon medals were created to commemorate the victories of the eponymous British naval commander in battles that took place between November 1739 and April 1741. The long and complex history of tension between England and Spain eventually came to a head when Spanish privateer coast guards, or guardacostas, boarded a Glasgow ship off Havana in 1731 and allegedly cut off her master's ear, to drive home the point of their anti-smuggling mission. When her captain Robert Jenkins produced his severed ear before Hampton Court in 1739, combined with many other merchant's complaints of lost cargoes and humiliation, the War of Jenkins's Ear was ignited with widespread public support. Admiral Edward Vernon, an experienced naval commander, scored a major military and public relations victory when he took the heavily fortified Portobelo in a single day on December 2nd 1739 with just six ships. This bold action, combined with the tide of positive public opinion, led to the hasty issue of Admiral Vernon pinchbeck medals commemorating the event to capitalize on the moment.

    A thorough and high quality analysis of the history and of the issues can be had in John Adams & Dr. Fernando Chao's 2010 Medallic Portraits of Admiral Vernon, from which this summary is drawn.

  8. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    The War of Jenkins Ear
    A43, Lot 354:

    GREAT BRITAIN. George II. 1727-1760. Copper/copper alloy medal. 11.08 gm. 37.2 mm. Duke of Argyll and Sir Robert Walpole contrasted. The Duke of Argyll, standing with his elbow on a pedestal that holds a crown; implements of war and the flag of St. George behind; THE GENEROUS DUKE OF ARGYLL around above; NO •• PENTIONER below / The Devil, pitchfork in his right hand, leading Walpole with a halter into the mouth of Hell; MAKE ROOM FOR SIR ROBERT around above; NO EXGISE below. Adams & Chao NLa 1-A (page 43). Betts 247. Good Extremely Fine; small bit of edge missing at 4 obverse.

    A similar (but not exact) piece sold in a 2022 Sedwick sale for $2400 plus commission. The metal in that piece was 43.31% copper, 49.31% zinc, 5.31% lead.

     

    The War of Jenkins Ear

    Admiral Vernon medals were created to commemorate the victories of the eponymous British naval commander in battles that took place between November 1739 and April 1741. The long and complex history of tension between England and Spain eventually came to a head when Spanish privateer coast guards, or guardacostas, boarded a Glasgow ship off Havana in 1731 and allegedly cut off her master's ear, to drive home the point of their anti-smuggling mission. When her captain Robert Jenkins produced his severed ear before Hampton Court in 1739, combined with many other merchant's complaints of lost cargoes and humiliation, the War of Jenkins's Ear was ignited with widespread public support. Admiral Edward Vernon, an experienced naval commander, scored a major military and public relations victory when he took the heavily fortified Portobelo in a single day on December 2nd 1739 with just six ships. This bold action, combined with the tide of positive public opinion, led to the hasty issue of Admiral Vernon pinchbeck medals commemorating the event to capitalize on the moment.

    A thorough and high quality analysis of the history and of the issues can be had in John Adams & Dr. Fernando Chao's 2010 Medallic Portraits of Admiral Vernon, from which this summary is drawn.

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