The Collector's Series

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$20.00

The Collector’ s S er ies

May 22-23, 2013 • New York

May 22-23, 2013

The

STAMPS COINS BANKNOTES MEDALS BONDS & SHARES AUTOGRAPHS BOOKS WINES

145 West 57th Street

18th Floor New York, New York 10019 www.spink.com

NEW YORK

© Copyright 2013

COLLECTOR’ S S ERIES THE ARTESIAN COLLECTION OF NATIONAL BANK NOTES, A FINE SELECTION OF TEXAS OBSOLETES, A FINAL OFFERING OF ITEMS FROM THE GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER SHOE BOX, A CHOICE SELECTION OF BONDS AND SHARES, AND A MAJOR GROUPING OF U.S. AND WORLD COINS AND PAPER MONEY


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GROUP CHAIRMAN AND CEO Olivier D. Stocker YOUR SPECIALISTS STAMPS UK - Tim Hirsch Guy Croton David Parsons Nick Startup Neill Granger Paul Mathews Dominic Savastano Tom Smith USA - George Eveleth Arthur Poudrier EUROPE - Guido Craveri Fernando Martínez CHINA - Anna Lee COINS UK - Mike Veissid Paul Dawson Richard Bishop William MacKay Eleanor Charlotte Dix Tim Robson Barbara Mears John Pett

SALE CALENDAR 2013 STAMPS 21 May 5 June 28 June 10/11 July 15/16 August 10 September 11 September 21 September 21/22 September 21 September

The award winning Medina collection of India Part II. Specialised Great Britain sale The Fordwater Collection of Canada and BNA Colonies The Collector's Series Sale The Collector's Series Sale The award winning Medina collection of India and States Part III. The award winning Medina collection of Great Britain The Japanese Occupation Issues of South East Asia Stamps and Covers of South East Asia Stamps and Covers of South East Asia

London London New York London New York London London Singapore Singapore Singapore

13025 13026 143 13027 144 13028 13029 13038 13030 13030

The Collector's Series Sale Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals Tibetan Coins from the Nick Rhodes Collection The Collector's Series Sale North East Indian Coins from the Nick Rhodes Collection Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals

New York London Hong Kong New York London London London

316 13013 13020 317 13019 13014 13015

The Collector's Series Sale The David Kirch Collection of English Provincial Banknotes Part IV: The North of England The Collector's Series Sale World Banknotes The Ibrahim Salem Collection of African Banknotes World Banknotes

New York London New York London London London

316 13035 317 13018 13037 13034

Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria

London London London

13001 13002 13003

The Collector's Series Sale Bonds and Share Certificates of the World The Collector's Series Sale Bonds and Share Certificates of the World

New York London New York London

316 13016 317 13017

The Collector's Series Sale The Collector's Series Sale

New York New York

316 317

An Evening of Exceptional Wines An Evening of Exceptional Wines

Hong Kong Singapore

USA - Stephen Goldsmith Greg Cole Normand Pepin CHINA - Mark Li BANKNOTES, BONDS & SHARES UK - Barnaby Faull Mike Veissid Andrew Pattison Tom Badley USA - Stephen Goldsmith China - Mark Li ORDERS, DECORATIONS, MEDALS & MILITARIA UK - Mark Quayle Oliver Pepys BOOKS UK - Philip Skingley Annie Beadle AUTOGRAPHS

COINS 22/23 May 27 June 21 August 28/29 August 24 September 27 September 3 December

USA - Stephen Goldsmith WINES CHINA - China – Anna Lee Guillaume Willk-Fabia YOUR EUROPE TEAM (LONDON - LUGANO)

Miroslava Adusei-Poku

Alison Bennet

Chairman’s Office Monica Kruber Charles Blane Directors Tim Hirsch Anthony Spink Auction & Client Management Team Luca Borgo Rita Ariete Sarah Schmitz John Winchcombe Harry Gladwin María Martínez Maurizio Schenini

Marco Fiori Mina Bhagat

Finance Dennis Muriu

Alison Kinnaird Billy Tumelty Claire Greenhill

IT & Administration Berdia Qamarauli Attila Gyanyi Liz Cones Curlene Spencer Tom Robinson Cristina Dugoni Giacomo Canzi

BANKNOTES 22/23 May 20 June 28/29 August 1/2 October 3 October 5 December

MEDALS 25 April 25 July 21 November

BONDS AND SHARES 22/23 May 7 June 28/29 August 28 November

YOUR AMERICA TEAM (NEW YORK - DALLAS) Chairman Emeritus John Herzog Auction Administration and Marketing & Design Lori Lewin

AUTOGRAPHS 22/23 May 28/29 August

Finance & Administration Sam Qureshi Auctioneers Stephen Goldsmith

WINES June September

YOUR ASIA TEAM (HONG KONG - SINGAPORE) Vice Chairman Anna Lee Administration Amy Yung Newton Tsang Raymond Tat Gary Tan

The above sale dates are subject to change Spink offers the following services: – VALuATIONS FOR INSuRANCE AND PROBATE FOR INDIVIDuAL ITEMS OR WHOLE COLLECTIONS – – SALES ON A COMMISSION BASIS EITHER OF INDIVIDuAL PIECES OR WHOLE COLLECTIONS –

SFW03


YOUR SPINK TEAM

FOR ThIS SALE

For your questions about the sale lots: Stephen Goldsmith Head of Numismatics Dept. sgoldsmith@spink.com 469.563.6699 Gregory J Cole Senior Numismatist World Coins gcole@spink.com 212.262.8400

May 22-23, 2013 – New York City, New York and on

and or

SALE LOCATION

Normand Pepin Numismatics npepin@spink.com 212.262.8400

SPINK USA 145 W. 57th St., 18th Floor New York, NY 10019 212/262-8400 Fax: 212/262-8484

PUBLIC AUCTION Wednesday, May 22, 2013 Thursday, May 23, 2013 Thursday, May 23, 2013

at 1:00 p.m. at 11:00 a.m. at 1:00 p.m.

Session 1 Session 2 Session 3

Lots 1 - 542 Lots 543 - 862 Lots 863 - 1277

VIEWING OF LOTS NEW YORK CITY GALLERY Wednesday, May 15, 2013 Thursday, May 16, 2013 Friday, May 17, 2013 Monday, May 20, 2013 Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Robert Litzenberger Autographs/Stocks & Bonds For your internet bidding: Clyde Townsend SPINK Live ctownsend@spink.com 972.788.2100 For your Bidding & Payment: Lori Lewin Auction Administration llewin@spink.com 212.262.8400

(Full Viewing)

9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m Other Days by Appointment Only at Our Discretion

Special Thanks to Robert Hearn National Bank Note Consultant

Spink is pleased to continue to offer Spink Live, the internet bidding service which has revolutionized the way in which our clients bid at auction. To get started, feel free to contact us today for personal assistance. Berdia Qamarauli is available by email: BQamarauli@spink.com or Tel: +44 (0)20 7563 4089

Use this QR code to visit our online catalogue and leave proxy bids on Spink Live. You can download the QR Code Reader for iPhone, Blackberry and Android from App Store on your smartphone.

145 West 57th Street, 18th Floor New York, NY 10019 1-800/556-7826 212/2628-8400 Fax: 212/262-8484 E-Mail: usa@spink.com

The Spink Environment Commitment: Paper from Sustainable Forests and Clean Ink For centuries Spink and its employees have been preserving and curating collectable items. We now wish to play a modest role in preserving our planet, as well as the heritage of collectables, so future generations may enjoy both.

For more information about Spink Services, forthcoming sales and sales results visit the Spink Website:

We insist that our printers source all paper used in the production of Spink catalogues from FSC registered suppliers (for further information on the FSC standard please visit fsc.org) and use inks containing no hazardous ingredients. We have further requested that they become registered with the environmental standard ISO140001. Spink recycle all ecological material used on our premises and we would encourage you to recycle your catalogue once you have finished with it.

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Auctioneer: Clockwise Front Cover Illustration: Lots 16, 467, 491, 498, 992, 818 Back Cover Illustration: Lots 105, 153, 345, 430, 491, 676, 687, 719, 818, 883

Stephen Goldsmith, New York City, Dept. of Consumer Affairs, License #1208097


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Terms and Conditions of Sale This is a public auction and mail-bid sale held by SPINK, who are licensed and bonded auctioneers. SPINK may not withdraw any lot after a call for bids has been made with respect to that lot, however, the consignor of the property included in the lot (or any other lot) may bid on and purchase the lot for his/her own account. If he/she does so, he/she must pay both the seller’s commission and buyer’s premium. 1. 2.

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The placing of a bid constitutes full acceptance of these Terms and Conditions of Sale by the bidder. The highest bidder acknowledged by SPINK shall be the buyer. In the event of any dispute between bidders, SPINK may, at its sole discretion, immediately put the lot up for sale again. SPINK’S decision shall be final and binding upon all bidders. A buyer’s premium equal to 20% of the successful bid price of each lot up to and including $2,000.00 and 15% of the excess bid price will be added to each invoice and is payable by the buyer as part of the total purchase price. All bids are to be per lot as numbered in this catalog. SPINK reserves the right to group two or more lots together and to withdraw, prior to call for bids, any lot(s) from the sale. Bids will be accepted in whole dollar amounts only, and SPINK reserves the right to reject any bid or advance the bidding at its discretion. SPINK may not withdraw any lot after a call for bids has been made with respect to that lot, however, the consignor of the property included in the lot (or any other lot) may bid on and purchase the lot for his/her own account. If he/she does so, he/she must pay both the seller’s commission and buyer’s premium. SPINK may have made advances and loans available to certain consignors and bidders in the sale. SPINK reserves the right to bid on any lot in the sale. Additionally, SPINK may or may not have financial interest in any of the lot(s) in the sale. All sales are strictly for cash, check and bank/wire transfer in United States dollars; however, SPINK will only accept cash payments under $10,000.00. SPINK offers clients the option of paying by credit card (Visa, MasterCard, and American Express only) in United States Dollars for a convenience charge of two percent (2%) for Visa and MasterCard and four percent (4%) for American Express, up to a total of $30,000.00. Credit card payments will only be accepted if (a) the purchase is made by the card holder, (b) any purchased items to be shipped are shipped to the cardholder’s verified billing address, (c) floor bidders present their credit cards and (d) all returns are governed by the terms and conditions of the sale. Payment is due and payable immediately upon receipt of the auction invoice or, if payment is to be made at the auction site, simultaneously with receipt of the purchased items. SPINK reserves the right to void a sale if payment in full of the invoice is not received by SPINK within fifteen (15) days of the date of invoice. A late charge in the amount of the lesser of 18% per annum and the maximum lawful rate will be charged on the invoice total if payment is not received within thirty (30) days of the date of the invoice. All lots are subject to applicable state and local taxes, unless appropriate resale certificates are on file with SPINK. Shipping, handling and administration charges will be added to invoices for lots delivered by mail. All lots will be shipped via U.S. Express Mail to Post Office boxes, via Federal Express to street addresses, and FedEx ground for bulky large

www.Spink.com

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lots (in the U.S. only). Purchases shipped via FedEx will not be covered by SPINK insurance in the event that the buyer has placed a “signature release” on file with FedEx. Buyer will be responsible for total purchase price in the event of loss. SPINK cannot be and is not responsible for the loss of any merchandise shipped outside the United States and therefore insurance on any items to be shipped outside the United States is solely the responsibility of the buyer. It is also the responsibility of the buyer to provide adequate insurance coverage for the items once they are in his/her possession. Risk of loss shall be borne by the buyer following shipment of the items and SPINK assumes no liability for merchandise lost, stolen or damaged while in the possession of a party to whom merchandise has been shipped. For international shipments, all duties/taxes/fees are the sole responsibility of the buyer. In the event a successful bidder fails to pay the charges due, SPINK reserves the right to resell the merchandise and the buyer agrees to pay for the reasonable cost of such a sale including a 10% seller’s commission, and also to pay any difference between the resale price and the winning price of his/her previously successful bid. SPINK reserves the right to require payment in full before delivery of the merchandise to the buyer. Bidder personally guarantees payment, and if a corporation, an officer or principal in the corporation agrees to personally guarantee payment. Title to any purchased items remains with SPINK until all invoices are paid in full. SPINK reserves the right to await clearance of any check used for payment before delivery of any item and a $25.00 charge will be applied for any check that fails to clear. SPINK reserves the right to refuse to honor or reject any bid which, in its opinion, is not submitted in good faith, or, as the case dictates, is not supported by satisfactory references, as SPINK in its sole discretion shall determine. SPINK further reserves the right to ban any bidder from participation in its sales for any reason deemed appropriate in its sole discretion. No minors may participate in any SPINK sales. Bids will be executed for mail bidders at one advance over the next highest bid in competition with floor and/or internet bidders, until the maximum bid is executed for the mail bidder, or until the lot is sold. No buy or unlimited bids will be accepted. No additional commission (except for the buyer’s premium) is charged for executing mail bids. SPINK cannot and does not assume any responsibility for errors made in the amount bid or lot numbers listed, so check your bid sheet and online submission carefully. When identical mail bids are submitted, preference is given to the first received. SPINK may reopen the bidding on a lot under the following circumstances: (a) SPINK has failed to execute correctly a mail bid; (b) A party purchasing the lot on the floor has done so in error; (c) Where a protest is made after the


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

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hammer has fallen but before bidding has commenced on the next lot; (d) Where the auctioneer has determined that he/she has overlooked a party still bidding on the lot but before the calling of the next lot; and (e) At the discretion of the auctioneer. In the event of a dispute, the auctioneer’s decision shall be final. Agents executing bids on behalf of clients will be held responsible for all purchases made on behalf of clients unless otherwise arranged prior to the sale. The same protections applicable to SPINK shall apply to each officer, director and employee of SPINK unless such individual shall be convicted of knowingly and intentionally selling false or stolen goods. The descriptions provided in the catalog are intended solely for the use of those bidders who do not have the opportunity to view the lots prior to bidding. All photographs in the catalog are as accurate as can be reproduced with today’s technology; however, they cannot be relied upon for exact reproduction of color. All bidders who have inspected the lots prior to the auction will not be granted any return privileges, except for reasons of genuineness. It is presumed that all floor bidders have inspected the lots prior to bidding. Therefore, lots purchased by floor bidders are sold “AS IS” and may not be returned. Floor Bidders include those bidders acting as agents for others. Additionally, SPINK reserves the right to describe items differently than the descriptions shown in the catalog should such items be consigned to any future auction. All the lots are sold as genuine. For the purpose of this sale, “genuine” is defined as not faked or forged and SPINK will not knowingly sell any item that has been “repaired’, “restored”, “processed”, “cleaned”, “pressed” or “conserved” in any way without disclosure of such facts to the potential buyer. The following conditions apply to requests for expertization of philatelic items: (a) Mail bidders are asked to advise SPINK of any extension requests at the time of placing their bids; (b) Floor bidders must advise SPINK of any extensions in writing at the time of lot settlement; (c) SPINK will submit all items so requested by successful bidders to the reputable authority of their choice; For United States stamps, the Philatelic Foundation and the Professional Stamp Experts are the accepted authorities. (d) Purchasers of items submitted for expertization must pay as part of the purchase price all charges for expertization, including postage and handling; (e) Purchasers of items to be expertized must make payment in full immediately upon purchase prior to expertizing; Refunds will be made promptly for all sums if in the unlikely event an item is returned with a negative opinion; (f) Requests for expertization of stamps with certificates dated within the last five (5) years of the sale date will not be granted; (g) No lot may be returned due to a certification service grading a stamp differently than the grade stated in the auction description; (h) No lot will be accepted as a return from expertization if the item is indelibly marked as being altered or fraudulent by the expertizing authority; and (i) No lot will be accepted as a return, for any reason whatsoever, including extension returns, after four (4) months from the sale date. Any exceptions to this time limitation must be agreed to in writing at SPINK sole discretion.

19. No lots may be returned without a written request by the successful bidder and the written approval of SPINK. In the unlikely event of returning a lot, SPINK must receive notification of the buyer’s intent within three (3) days of the buyer’s receipt of the lot. The following lots may not be returned for any reason whatsoever: (a) lots containing ten or more items; (b) lots described as having faults or defects because of the faults described or any others, including lots described as “repaired”, “corroded”, “holed”, “whizzed”, or similar damage, except for non-authenticity; (c) illustrated lots because of centering, margins, etc. or other factors shown in the illustrations; (d) lots described “AS IS”, including third party graded coins or banknotes (i.e. PCGS, NGC, ANACS, ICG); (e) lots valued primarily for the bullion content; (f) lots examined by postal viewers; and (g) any philatelic extension lot unless the conditions set forth in Item 18 above is complied with fully. Except for lots placed on extension, as per the conditions of Item 18 above, no lots may be returned for any reason whatsoever after thirty (30) days from sale date. Late payment for purchase may, at SPINK option, be considered just cause to revoke all return privileges. If any disputes arise regarding payment, authenticity, or description between the bidder and SPINK, SPINK at its sole discretion, may submit the disputed matter to binding arbitration in Dallas, Texas, to which the bidder, by placing a bid and hereby accepting these Terms and Conditions of Sale, agrees to be bound. 20. United States coins and currency will not, in conformity with the law, be opened at less than face value. 21. The auctioneer reserves the right to postpone the sale by auction for a reasonable period of time as a result of any significant event which, in the sole discretion of the auctioneer, makes it advisable to postpone the event. No prospective bidder or prospective buyer shall have recourse as a result of any postponement 22. In the event SPINK refers an invoice(s) to an attorney for collection, the buyer agrees to pay SPINK attorney’s fees, court costs, witness fees and other costs incurred by SPINK. 23. ThESE TERMS OF SALE ShALL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITh ThE LAWS OF ThE STATE OF TEXAS, WIThOUT GIVING REGARD TO ThE PRINCIPLES OF CONFLICTS OF LAW. ThE SIGNER OF A SPINK BID ShEET OR PARTICIPANT IN ThE AUCTION AGREES ThAT EXCLUSIVE VENUE FOR ANY DISPUTE WITh RESPECT TO ThESE TERMS OR IN CONNECTION WITh SPINK ShALL RESIDE INA STATE OR FEDERAL COURT LOCATED IN DALLAS, TEXAS. 24. On-line Bidding — SPINK offers internet services as a convenience to our clients, but SPINK will not be responsible for errors or failures to execute bids placed on the internet, including, without limitation, errors or failures caused by (i) a loss of connection on SPINK or your end; (ii) a breakdown or problems with the online bidding software and/or (iii) a breakdown or problems with a client's internet connection, computer or system. Execution of on-line internet bids is a free service undertaken subject to other commitments at the time of the sale and SPINK does not accept liability for failing to execute an online internet bid or for errors or omissions in connection with this activity.

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Order of Sale Session 1 – Wednesday, May 22, 2013 – 1:00 PM – 5 PM (ET) Ancient Coins ............................................................................................................................1-20 Islamic Coinage ........................................................................................................................21-44 World Coins ..........................................................................................................................45-282 A Small Collection of the Coins of Scotland ..................................................................102-141 United States Coins ..............................................................................................................283-542

Session 2 – Thursday, May 23, 2013 – 11:00 AM – 1 PM (ET) World Paper Money ............................................................................................................543-594 Bonds and Shares ................................................................................................................595-743 Confederate Currency ..........................................................................................................744-771 Obsolete Currency................................................................................................................772-862

Session 3 – Thursday, May 23, 2013 – 3:00 PM – 6 PM (ET) Federal Currency ..................................................................................................................863-908 National Bank Notes ........................................................................................................909-1123 Autographs - Custer ........................................................................................................1124-1183 Autographs - General........................................................................................................1184-1277

Lot 1197 www.Spink.com


145 West 57th Street, 18th Floor New York, New York 10019 Toll Free: 1-800-556-7826 (212) 262-8400 ✦ Fax: (212) 262-8484

Sale #316

E-mail: usa@spink.com

MAIL BID FORM Name (please print) ________________________________________________________ Company Name __________________________________________________________ Address __________________________________________________________________ City, State, Zip ____________________________________________________________ Daytime Phone__________________________ Evening Phone

The May 22-23, 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

__________________

FAX No.__________________________ E-mail: ________________________________ Bid Amt. $

Lot #

Bid Amt. $

Lot #

Bid Amt. $

Tear Here & Return In Enclosed Envelope

Lot #

Check here if you wish to limit your total amount of purchases. (Hammer Price Only)

Limit total: $ ____________________________ To ensure that bids will be accepted and delivery of lots not delayed, bidders not yet known to SPINK should supply a list of Dealer References. SPINK offers clients the option of paying by credit card (Visa, MasterCard, and American Express only) in United States Dollars for a convenience charge of two percent (2%) for Visa and MasterCard and four percent (4%) for American Express, up to a total of $30,000.00.

If Necessary, please increase my bid by:

10%

20%

30%

Dealer References: (list city, state, zip, & phone) ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________

Name (on credit card) __________________________________________________ Card Number:

Security Code: Exp. Date:

Signature: __________________________________________________________Date: ____________________ I have read and agreed to all the Terms and Conditions of Sale for this catalog. Please note there is a 20% buyer’s premium added to the hammer price of each lot up to and including $2,000.00 and 15% of the excess of the hammer price above $2,000.00.


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Lot #

Bid Amt. $

Lot #

Bid Amt. $

Lot #

Bid Amt. $

BIDDING INCREMENTS The auctioneer generally advances the bidding in the following incremental amounts:

Up to $100 ........................................by $100 to $300 ....................................by $300 to $750 ....................................by $750 to $1,500..................................by $1,500 to $3,000 ..............................by $3,000 to $7,500 ..............................by

$5 $10 $25 $50 $100 $250

$7,500 to $15,000..................... by $500 $15,000 to $30,000...................by $1,000 $30,000 to $75,000................... by $2,500 $75,000 to $150,000................. by $5,000 $150,000 to $300,000............... by $10,000 $300,000+..........at auctioneer’s discretion

Please note, however, that the auctioneer may, in his or her sole discretion, vary the bidding increments during the course of the auction to expedite the bidding.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

FIRST SESSION Wednesday, May 22, 2013- 1:00 p.m. Lots 1-542 Spink Smythe, New York

ANCIENT COINS

3

Characene. Attambelos I (47/46-25/24 BC). Billon Tetradrachm. Charax-Spasinou, dated SE 273 (34/33 BC). 11.52 gms. Diameded head r., rev. Herakles seated left on rock, monogram upper inner left, date ΓOΣ in ex. Hill, Attambelos Series C, 16-19; Alram—. Typical grainy surfaces, toned over some obverse hairlines in field, About Very Fine. Est. 150-200

4

Characene. Thionesios I (ca. 25-20/18 BC). Billon Tetradrachm. Charax-Spasinou, dated SE 288 (25/24 BC). 13.16 gms. Diademed head r., rev. Herakles seated left on rock, Θ inner left, date (H)ΠΣ in ex. Nicolet-Pierre Thionèsis pl.IV, 19v, BMC Arabia 4. Grainy, trivial earthen deposits on reverse, Very Fine. Est. 200-250

5

Seleukid Kings of Syria. Seleukos I Nikator (312281 BC). AR Tetradrachm. Seleukeia on the Tigris, struck ca. 296/5-281 BC. 17.18 gms. Laureate head of Zeus r., rev. Athena, brandishing spear and shield, in quadriga of horned elephants r., anchor above, AN(?) in ex. Cf.SC 130.3. Struck from shallow dies, some old surface nicks, Fine. In 303 BC, a treaty of amity and peace was reached between Seleukos I and Chandragupta Maurya, founder of the Mauryan Empire in northern India. Chandragupta married the daughter of Seleukos and sent 500 war elephants to his new father-in-law. Est. 400-500

6

Sasanian Empire. Ardashir III (628-630). AR Drachm, AB (Abarsahr) year 2. 4.08 gms. Bust r. wearing winged crown, rev. Fire altar with attendants. Göbl 227. Near Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

7

Sasanian Empire. Ardashir III (628-630). AR Drachm, YZ (Yazd) year 2. 4.10 gms. Bust r. wearing winged crown, rev. Fire altar with attendants. Göbl SN I/1. Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

Ancient Greek Coins

1 1

Kingdom of Macedon. Antigonos II Gonatas (277-239 BC). AR Tetradrachm. Amphipolis, struck after 270 BC. 16.52 gms. Head of Pan r., with goat horns and goat skin, at center of Macedonian shield, rev. Athena Alkidemos striding l., brandishing thunderbolt and shield, crested Athenian helmet left field, monogram right. SNG Alpha Bank 986, SNG Ashmolean 3258. Pale white, reverse tooling and some scratches, Very Fine. Est. 400-500

2 2

Attica, Athens. AR Tetradrachm, struck 420-404 BC. 17.15 gms. Helmeted head of Athena r., rev. AΘE, Owl standing facing, olive sprig and crescent behind. Kroll 8, SNG Copenhagen 31. Full profile on somewhat tight flan, Very Fine. Est. 400-500

Page 1


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

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Sasanian Empire. Ardashir III (628-630). AR Drachm, YZ (Yazd) year 2. 4.11 gms. Bust r. wearing winged crown, rev. Fire altar with attendants. Göbl SN I/1. Small pinscratch reverse margin. Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

Byzantine Coinage

12 Focas (602-610). Gold Solidus. Constantinople, tenth officina, struck 607-609. 4.47 gms. Crowned, draped and cuirassed bust facing, holding a globis cruciger, rev. VICTORIA AVGU I, Angel standing facing, holding a long staff surmounted by a christogram and a globus cruciger, CONOB in ex. DOC 10j, S.620. Lustrous, Good Extremely Fine. Est. 500-600

12

9 9

Hunnic. Alchon Huns. Khingila (Ca. 440-490). Gold Broad Dinara. 7.41 gms. In the name of Bahram III (Kidara). King standing l., sacrificing over altar, holding trident, trident in field, degenerate Baktrian legend, rev. Siva standing facing with the bull Nandi. Alram Alcon 26, Göbl Em 84, MK 739. Struck from worn dies as is typical, Very Fine. Est. 800-900

10

Hunnic. Chaganian (Tokharistan). Billon Drachm, 6th Century AD. 2.98 gms. Peroz-style bust r. flanked by tamghas, portrait bust c/m above, rev. Fire-altar with attendants, zoomorphic (winged “camel”) and head c/ms in margin. Sogd Tokh. T21. Rare. Crude Fine-About Very Fine. Est. 125-175

13 Constans II (641-668) with Constantine IV. Gold Solidus. Constantinople, fifth officina, struck 654-659. 4.35 gms. Crowned facing busts of Constans, with long beard, and Constantine IV, beardless, both wearing a chlamys, cross above and between them, rev. VICTORIA AVGU E, cross potent on three steps, CONOB in ex. DOC 25e, MIB 26, S.959. Lustrous, Extremely Fine. Est. 500-600

13

Roman Provincial Coinage 11

Roman Egypt. Ca. 4th Century AD. Quintet of Glass Disk Weights. Blue-green, 17-19mm. Bust of Eros winged Victory r., rev. Head of Hercules r. Cf. Corning III, 909-913. Reverse glass gouge on one, minor clouding on two, About Fine-About Very Fine. (5) Est. 90-120

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I D D I N G

As an added convenience to our bidders in the sale, we offer telephone bidding during the auction which gives buyers the flexibility they may need to increase their bids as the auction proceeds. Please call our offices (800-556-7826 or 212-262-8400) to arrange for telephone bidding prior to the sale and ask for Lori Lewin.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

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Constantine IV Pogonatus (668-685) with Heraclius and Tiberius. Gold Solidus. Constantinople, fourth officina, struck 674-681. 4.45 gms. Armored bust slightly r., wearing helmet with crest and plume, holding spear over shoulder and shield, rev. Cross potent on three steps flanked by standing facing figures of Heraclius and Tiberius, each holding globus cruciger, legend ends Δ recut over Θ (?), CONOB in ex. DOC 10c, MIB7b, S.1156. Decent lustre, Extremely Fine. Est. 500-600

15 15

17

Basil I, the Macedonian with Constantine (868879). Gold Solidus. Constantinople. 4.45 gms. Nimbate figure of Christ enthroned facing, raising His hand in benediction and holding book of the Gospels; legend ends with a five-point star, rev. Crowned facing busts of Basil, short-bearded, wearing a loros, and Constantine, beardless, wearing a chlamys, holding a patriarchal cross between them. DOC 2b, S.1704. Old hairline scratch upper right reverse, bold strike, Extremely Fine. Est. 700-800

18

John II Comnenus (1118-1143). Electrum Aspron Trachy. Constantinople. 4.38 gms. Christ Pantokrator enthroned facing, rev. John, wearing divitision and chlamys, and St. George, in military attire, standing facing, holding patriarchal cross between them. DOC 8a, S.1941.A few test hairline scratches in margins, pleasing details, Good Very Fine. Est. 225-275

Constantine IV Pogonatus (668-685). Gold Solidus. Constantinople, second officina, struck 681685. 4.41 gms. Armored bust 3/4 r., wearing crested helmet and holding spear over shoulder and shield adorned with horseman charging right, rev. Cross potent on three steps, legend ends “B”, CONOB in ex. DOC 12b, S.1157. Lustrous, Extremely Fine. Est. 800-1000

Earliest Numismatic Depiction of Christ

16 16

Justinian II, first reign (685-695). Gold Soldius. Constantinople, struck 692-695. 4.49 gms. Facing bust of Christ Pantokrator wearing a pallium over colobium, raising His hand in benediction and holding book of the Gospels, cross behind, rev. Justinian standing facing, crowned and wearing a loros, holding cross potent on two steps and akakia, CONO PA in ex. DOC 8c, S.1249. Near Extremely Fine An important development in Christian iconography, this coin marks the earliest numismatic depiction of Christ. During the early Christian period, it was normal practice to represent Christ only through symbolism. The official view of this matter shifted in 692. In that year, the Quinisext Council (Council in Trullon) was called by the emperor Justinian II to reconcile the differences between Eastern and Western church practices and to help repair the growing schism between Constantinople and Rome. One of the issues debated by the Council was how should Christ be portrayed. The Council ruled that from thereon, He should be depicted in human form. It is not known whether the Council’s ruling directly influenced the striking of this coin, but certainly there is a strong connection. The court at Constantinople was more than likely already predisposed to the portrayal of Christ in human form, and the court’s desire was made manifest in ink and metal. Est. 4000-5000

Page 3


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

19

Isaac II Angelus (1185-1195). Electrum Aspron Trachy. Constantinople. 3.57 gms. The Theotokos (Virgin Mary) enthroned facing, holding the Holy Infant on her lap, rev. Isaac, with short beard, standing facing, wearing loros, holding cross-tipped scepter and akakia, being crowned and blessed by the St. Michael the Archangel. DOC 2, S.2002. Minor discoloration obverse outer margin and a few test nicks reverse, wellstruck for type, Good Very Fine. Est. 225-275

23

Lot of Dirhams: Umayyad. Dimashq AH 87, 98 (minor, contemporary graffiti letters in field); Abbasid (5); and Arab-Bukharan Billon Drachm in name of Caliph al-Mahdi. One a bit scruffy, otherwise toned About Very Fine-Very Fine. (8) Est. 125-175

24

Abbasid. al-Mansur (AH 136-158/754-775 AD). Gold Dinar, nm AH 158. 4.02 gms. A-212. Slightly clipped, Very Fine. Est. 225-275

25

Abbasid. al-Mu`tamid (AH 256-279/870-892 AD). Gold Dinar, Misr AH 263. 4.14 gms. Citing Ja`far as heir. A-239.1. Scarce. Old scrape upper margin and some test marks in peripheries, Very Fine. Est. 250-300

26

Spain. Muluk al-Tawa’if (Los reyes de taifas). `Âmirid of Valencia. `Abd al-Aziz al-Mansur (AH 412-452/1021-1061 AD). Gold Fractional Dinar, nm nd. 1.15 gms. Citing al-Nasir and Ibn Aghlab. Quadrilobe below. A-375.3. Very Fine. Est. 150-200

27

`Âmirid of Valencia. `Abd al-Aziz al-Mansur (AH 412-452/1021-1061 AD). Gold Fractional Dinar, nm nd. 1.44 gms. Citing al-Muzaffar and Ibn Aghlab. Six-point star with pellets below. A-375.5. Rare. About Very Fine. Est. 175-225

28

`Âmirid of Valencia. `Abd al-Malik al-Muzaffar (AH 452-457/1061-1065 AD). Gold Fractional Dinar, nm nd. 0.89 gms. A-377. Rare. Very Fine. Est. 175-225

20 20

Empire of Nicaea. John III Ducas-Vatatzes (12221254). Gold Hyperpyron Nomisma. Magnesia, struck 1232-1254. 4.46 gms. Christ Pantokrator enthroned facing, rev. John standing facing, wearing a loros, holding a stellate labarum and an akakia, being crowned and blessed by the Virgin. DOC 5, S.2073. Near Extremely Fine. Est. 300-400

ISLAMIC COINAGE 21

Arab-Sasanian. `Umar b. `Ubayd Allah, Zubayrid governor (AH 67-72/686-691 AD). AR Drachm, BYSh (Bishapur) AH 67. 4.2 gms. lillah al-hamd in margin. A-21. Deep gray, Extremely Fine. Est. 125-175

29

22 22

Arab-Sasanian. `Umar b. `Ubayd Allah, Zubayrid governor (AH 67-72/686-691 AD). AR Drachm, BYSh (Bishapur) AH 70. 3.8 gms. lillah al-hamd in margin. A-21. A much scarcer date for type than AH 67-69. Light gray, Extremely Fine. Est. 125-175

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29

Dhu’l-Nunids of Toledo. Occupation of Valencia, 1065-1075 AD. Sharaf al-Dawla Yahya I (al-Ma’mun (AH 435-467/1043-1075). Gold Fractional Dinar, nm (Balansiya) nd. 1.17 gms. Ruler cited as alMa’mun, arrow above, pellet below. A-396. Rare. Thin flan crack, Very Fine. Est. 175-225

30

Dhu’l-Nunids of Toledo. Occupation of Valencia, 1065-1075 AD. Sharaf al-Dawla Yahya I (al-Ma’mun (AH 435-467/1043-1075). Gold Fractional Dinar, nm (Balansiya) nd. 0.95 gms. Ruler cited as alMa’mun, waw and crescent-wave pattern with three annulets above. A-396. Rare. Irregular flan, Very Fine. Est. 175-225


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Very Rare Zuray`id Dinar

31 31

Murabitid (Almoravid).`Ali b. Yusuf (AH 500537/1106-1142 AD). Gold Dinar, Ishbiliya (Sevilla) AH 517. 3.96 gms. Pellet below ruler’s name/ lem kef below. Hazard 215, A-466. About Extremely Fine. Est. 1000-1500

35 35

Arabia. Zuray`id. `Imran b. Muhammad (AH 550561/1155-1165 AD). Gold Dinar, `Adan AH 561. 2.33 gms. In his name, without Fatimid overlord: awhid muluk/al-zumn malik al-`izz/wa-`l-thumn `Imran/bin Muhammad. Crescent facing downwards below ruler’s name; `Ali wali Allah below Kalima. A-1080I. Very Rare. Nice strike, Extrem ely Fine. Est. 900-1200

36

Ayyubid Branch in the Yemen. Al-Nasir Ayyub (AH 598-611/1202-1214 AD). AR Dirham, Ta`izz AH 608. 2.09 gm. Legends in cartouches. A-1094. Choice Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

32 32

North Africa. Merinid. Abu Faris `Abd al-`Aziz II (AH 796-799/1393-1396 AD). Gold Dinar, Madinat Fès nd. 4.46 gms. Hafsid style. Three-line legends in central squares. Hazard 849, A-540.2 Extremely Fine. Est. 600-700 37 37

Ottoman Empire. Süleyman I (AH 926-974/15201566 AD). Gold Sultani, Sidrekipsi AH 926. 3.53 gms. A-1317. Pleasing style, a decent example of this Greek mint (Sidirokastro), Very Fine. Est. 250-300

33 33

Crusaders. Kingdom of Jerusalem. Gold Bezant (Dinar), ca. 1148-1187 AD. Struck at Acre. 3.51 gms. Imitating Fatimid types of al-Âmir. A-730. Crude, Very Fine. Est. 350-450

34

Burji Mamluk. Al-Zahir Abu Sa`id Jaqmaq (AH 842-857/1438-1453 AD). Gold Ashrafi, al-Qahira nd. 3.38 gms. Legends separated by three lines of cables. A-1006. About Very Fine. Est. 150-200

38 38

Ottoman Empire. Murad III (AH 9821003/1574-1595 AD). Gold Sultani, Halab (Aleppo) AH 982. 3.45 gms. A-1332.1. Bold strike, About Extremely Fine. Est. 250-300

Page 5


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

39

Quartet of Eastern issues: `Alids of Tabaristan. AlHasan b. Zayd (AH 250-270/864-884 AD). AR Dirham, Jurjan AH 269. A-1523. Rare. Typical flatness in margins, Very Fine; Khwarezmshahs. `Ala alDin Muhammad (AH 596-617/1200-1220 AD). Billon Broad Dirhams (3, different types). Light deposits in peripheries, About Very FineVery Fine. (4) Est. 125-175

42 42

40 40

Mehrabanid. Qutb al-Din Muhammad II (AH 784-788/1382-1386 AD). Gold Tanka, Nimruz AH (78)2. 10.99 gms. Kalima within looped square, ruler named al-malik al-a`zam al-`adil Qutb al-dunya wa’ldin Muhammad bin Karman. A-2361. Very Rare. Bold strike for type, Extremely Fine. The date AH 782 would suggest that either the chronicles have Qutb al-Din’s reign dates wrong, or that he had been named king before the death of his aged and infirm father `Izz al-Haqq wa’l-din Karman’. Est. 800-900

Kakwayhid. Faramurz (AH 433-443/1041-1051 AD). Gold Dinar, Isbahan AH 435. 2.81 gms. Citing the Seljuq Tughril Beg as overlord, shams above reverse. A-1592.2. Attractive broad flan. About as Struck. Est. 250-300

43 43

41 41

Ghaznavids. Mahmud , as independent ruler (AH 389-421/999-1030 AD). Gold Dinar, Nishapur AH 390. 5.23 gms. `ayn and mim lower obverse field. A1606. Some typical weakness in outer margin, Good Very Fine. Est. 250-300

Manghits of Bukhara. Nasrullah (AH 12421277/1827-1860 AD). Gold Tilla, Bukhara-yi sharif AH 1253 (obverse) 1255 (reverse) - with the “2”s appearing as “3”s. 4.55 gms. Inscribed rahmat bad bar ma`sum ghazi (May mercy be upon Ma`sum Ghazi [a locally famous hero of earlier times]). A-3035. Minor flatness lower margin, good lustre, Extremely Fine. Est. 300-350

44 44

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Manghits of Bukhara. Muzaffar al-Din (AH 12771303/1860-1886 AD). Gold Tilla, Bukhara-yi sharif AH 1291 (dated on both sides). 4.54 gms. A-3038. Extremely Fine. Est. 300-350


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

WORLD COINS Europe

49 49

Denmark. Christian IX (1863-1906). 20 Kroner, 1890 HC-CS. Head right, rev. Dania seated left, dolphin before, sheaf of wheat behind. Fr.295, KM 791.1. Scarce date. Very minor contact marks. Uncirculated. Est. 550-650

50

Estonia. Reval. Under Sweden. Erik XIV (15601568). Ferding, (15)68. Crowned bust of the king r., rev. Arms. Ahlström 19, Neumann 6b. Light slate gray, Good Very Fine. Est. 125-175

45 45

Albania. Zog I (1928-1939). 20 Franga Ari, 1938 R. Roma. On the Marriage of King Zog to Countess Geraldine Apponyi, April 27, 1938. Bare head right, rev. Helmeted and mantled Arms, marriage date below. Fr.14, KM 22. Mintage of only 2,500 pieces. Light contact marks. About Uncirculated. King Zog, a Muslim, married the American-Hungarian, and Roman Catholic, Countess Géraldine Margit Virginia Olga Mária Apponyi de Nagyappony in Tirana in a ceremony witnessed by Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian envoy and son-in-law of Il Duce. The two motored off to their honeymoon in an open, scarlet Mercedes 540K, a gift from Hitler. The apparent “chumminess” with fascist Italy and Nazi Germany was more an enforced political and economic necessity of Albania, who had grown fully dependent on Italy during the worldwide depression of the 1930’s. Zog, chaffing under the influence, often defied Italy’s demands, while in 1938 he opened Albania’s borders to Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution. On April 7, 1939, Italy invaded Albania. It was two days after the birth of their son and the royal couple fled in exile. Searching the royal palace and finding linen stained from the birth in the queen’s labor room, Count Ciano was said to have remarked “the cub has escaped.” Est. 350-450

51 51

France. Louis XVI (1774-1793). Louis d’or, 1786 H. La Rochelle. Head left of the ill-fated ruler, rev. Crowned conjoined Arms. Fr 471, Gad 361, KM 591.6. Adjustment marks upper reverse center, scratch by crown, rosé peripheral hues, About Very Fine. Est. 450-550

46

Austria. Salzburg. Johann Ernst v. Thun (16871709). ½ Taler, 1609. Hatted and tasseled Arms, rev. Saints Rupert and Virgil facing each other. KM 253. Small edge flaw, attractive old toning over light obverse scratch, Extremely Fine. Est. 125-175

52

German States. Aachen. Freiestadt. Pair of minors: 3 Marck, 1754, Charlemagne facing behind shield; 16 Marck, 1752, eagle with `16’ on breast/crown. KM 50, 43. The first About Extremely Fine, the latter Good Fine. (2) Est. 100-150

47

Czechoslovakia. Dukat 1927. Arms, rev. Half-length figure of Duke Wenceslas facing. Fr.2, KM 8. Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 175-225

53

48

Denmark. Run of 2 Skilling, 1648, 1649, 1653, 1654 (2, var), 1662, 1663, 1665, 1677; also Reval. Ore, 1649 (holed); and Sweden. Öre, 1634; Öre, 1701. Fine-Good Very Fine. Est. 90-120

German States. Quintet of larger 18th Century minors: Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, Karl I (1735-1780), 1/3 Taler, 1775E/IDB , head r./horse galloping l.; 8 Gute Groschen, 1756 ACB, ornate Arms; Hamburg. Freie und Hansestadt.16 Schilling, 1726 IHL, Imperial eagle/Arms; Hesse-Cassel, Frederick I, King of Sweden (1730-1751), 8 Albus, 1737, laureate head r./value and date within chain wreath; Württemberg, Karl Eugen (1744-1793), 15 Kreuzer, 1758, KM 980, 947, 166, 424, 388. Very Fine to Choice Extremely Fine. (5) Est. 150-200

Page 7


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

54

German States. Lot of 17th Century Silver minors, more than half, issues of Würzburg (Kortlings and Schillings), the others from Metz, Nürnberg, Saxony, Solms-Hohensolms, and Worms. Generally smaller minors. Fine to Extremely Fine. (16) Est. 150-200

55

German States and Hungary. Lot of 17th-18th Century Silver minors, Kreuzer-15 Kreuzer sizes. The German (12) Includes issues of Bavaria, Breslau, Brunswick-Luneburg (ex-mount), East Friesland, Pfalz-Simmern, Rostock and Schleswig-HolsteinGottorp; also AE Pfennig of Osnabruck; the Hungarian (7) all issues of Leopold I. Fine to About Uncirculated, one or two higher. (19) Est. 200-250

56

Germany. World War I series. Pair of Silver Medals. Silver, 33mm. Wilhelm II/Das Schwert, 1914. Uniformed bust of Kaiser Wilhelm II l., wearing eagletopped helmet, rev. Six-line legend across `IN AUFGEDRUNGENER NOTWEHR…DAS SCHWERT’ and date. Zetzmann 2081 (RR). Very Rare. Contact marks in fields, good lustre; Fieldmarshal v. Mackensen/Brest-Litowsk, 1915. Uniformed bust of v. Mackensen ¾ r. wearing Iron Cross, rev. BrestLitowsk , 26 Aug. 1915 legend, spray below, some hairlines. Both Extremely Fine. (2) Est. 150-200

58 58

Great Britain. Anne (1702-1714). Crown, 1708. SEPTIMO. Second bust l., rev. Crowned cruciform Arms, Garter star at center. S.3601. A few minor surface nicks, weakness of strike on the upper Arms, pale violet-gray with soft iridescent hues, About Very Fine. Est. 250-300

59

Great Britain. Pair of Shillings. George I (17141727). Shilling, 1723 SSC. Light obverse haymarking, About Extremely Fine; George III (1760-1820), Shilling, 1787. Without hearts. Some light hairlines, Extremely Fine. S.3647, 3743. (2) Est. 125-175

60

Great Britain. George II (1727-1760). Half Crown, 1741. Young, laureate and draped bust l., rev. Crowned cruciform Arms, Garter star at center, roses in angles. S.3693. A few obverse hairlines, pale slategray tone, Very Fine. Est. 200-300

57 57

England. Plantagenets. Richard II (1377-1399). Noble. King standing facing, within galley, holding shield and sword, rev. Croix fleur-de-lisée, “R” at center, crowned leopards in angles, all within tressure. S.1656. NGC AU 50. Est. 3000-3500 61 61

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Great Britain. George II (1727-1760). Half Crown, 1750. Old, laureate and draped bust l., rev. Crowned cruciform Arms, Garter star at center, nothing in angles. S.3696. Small graffiti x’s (patriarchal crosses) in two of the reverse angles, toned Good Very Fine. Est. 250-350


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

65 62 62

65

Great Britain. George III (1760-1820). Crown, 1818. Edge: LIX. Laureate head r., rev,. Pistrucci’s St. George. S.3787. Numerous obverse hairlines on head, Uncirculated. Est. 500-600

Great Britain. Victoria (1837-1901). Penny, 1880. Obverse 9/Reverse L. Laureate bust l., rev. Britannia seated r., extra feather in helmet plume, three rings above hand, lighthouse with cluster of rocks to left. S.3954. NGC MS 64 RB. Est. 250-350

British Historical Medals

63 63

64

Great Britain. George III (1760-1820). Crown, 1819. Edge: LX. Laureate head r., rev, . Pistrucci’s St. George. S.3787. Some small scattered surface nicks, Extremely Fine. Est. 600-700 Great Britain. AE and Silver lot. `Cartwheel’ 2 Pence, 1797, a few small rim bruises, Very Fine, Penny, 1797. Deposit spot, About Extremely Fine; 1/3 Farthing, 1886, 1902 - both ex Gibbs coll., both Uncirculated; Victorian Shillings (3, one with scratch) and Six Pence, Halfpennies (4) and Penny. About Uncirculated-Uncirculated, George V 6 Pence and other AE (2). (16) Est. 100-150

66 66

Great Britain. George I (1714-1727). Official Coronation Medal, 1714. Silver, 34.3mm. By John Croker. Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust r., rev. George I enthroned r. in full regalia, holding scepter and orb, being crowned by Britannia standing before him. Eimer 470, MI ii 424/9. Magnification reveals friction marks in lustrous fields, Extremely Fine. Est. 250-300

Most single item lots can be viewed on our website www. spink.com, but not all multi-piece lots are imaged. Our specialist will gladly describe any multi-piece lot to you via Internet or telephone.

Page 9


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

British 18th-19th Century Tokens 70

Great Britain. England. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens: Bedfordshire. Leighton Buzzard; Buckinghamshire. Chesham; Cambridgeshire. Beehive/Druid head, Beehive/Britannia, Druid head/Britannia; Cheshire. Macclesfield; Devonshire. Exeter; Durham. South Shields; Essex. Chelmsford, Warley; Gloucestershire. Newent; Hampshire. Emsworth, Gosport, Petersfield, Portsmouth, Portsea, Southampton; Herefordshire. Hereford (old collection number stamped in field); Hertfordshire. Stortford; also Druid head Farthing of Cambridgeshire. Generally Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (42) Est. 275-375

71

Great Britain. England. 19th Century Token lot. Twopence - Bilston, Rushbury & Wooley; Pennies (9) - Staffordshire. Bilston, Rushbury & Wooley; Worcester. House of Industry; Yorkshire. Hull, Picard’s; Sheffield, Hobson’s, Overseers of the Poor, Phoenix Iron Works, Halfpennies (6) - House of Industry, Rose Copper Co., Royal Exchange, Thomas Wood, Dunham & Yallop, British Copper Co.; Farthing - Bristol, Patent Sheathing. Some of the larger pieces with surface marks, Fine-About Uncirculated. (17) Est. 125-175

72

Great Britain. England. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens: Kent. Deptford, Hythe, Lamberhurst, Maidstone, Tenterden; Lancashire. Lancaster, Manchester, Rochdale; Lincolnshire. Sleaford, Spalding; Norfolk. Norwich; Northamptonshire. Northampton; Nottinghamshire. Nottingham. Generally Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (32) Est. 200-250

73

Great Britain. England. Trio of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens: Gloucestershire. Badminton. Halfpenny, nd. George III head r./Plough, “…Cultivation of Waste Lands”. D&H 26.Decent amount of red, Uncirculated; Hampshire. Emsworth. Halfpenny, 1795; Admiral Howe. D&H 29b. Choice Extremely Fine; Middlesex. Dodd’s. Halfpenny, nd. Bust r., “Handel Instruments..”/Harp in radiate circle. D&H 300. Extremely Fine. (3) The first and last ex H.D. Gibbs Collection. Est. 100-150

74

Great Britain. England. Middlesex. 18th Century Halfpenny Token lot: Allen’s, Ching’s Worm Lozenges, Corresponding Society, Fowler’s, Hall’s Mrs. Newsham the White Negress, Lyceum, Newgate Prison, Pidcock’s, Shackelton’s, Spence’s - Oddfellows, Stinton’s, Williams, Shakespeare, National Series George III and Charlotte, Prince of Wales, Princess of Wales, John of Gaunt; Hardy, Isaac Newton; also Penny Token, nd. Kempson’s Trinity Alms House. D&H 67. Fine-Uncirculated. (24) Est. 200-300

67 67

Great Britain. George II (1727-1760). Official Coronation Medal, 1727. Silver, 34.5mm. By John Croker. Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust r., rev. George II enthroned r. in full regalia, holding scepter and orb, being crowned by Britannia, holding a cornucopiae and resting her arm on a fasces pillar. Eimer 510, MI ii 479/4. Light filing on edge and some hairlines in fields, attractive pearly-gray tone with good lustre, Extremely Fine. Est. 250-300

68 68

Great Britain. George III (1760-1820). Coronation of Queen Charlotte, 1761. Official Medal. Silver, 34mm. By L. Natter. Draped bust r., rev. Charlotte standing, facing, in full regalia, being crowned by Fame hovering above, altar at right. Eimer 696, BHM 65-6. Lovely old toning over small obverse scratch and some contact marks, decent lustre, Near Extremely Fine. Est. 350-450

69

Great Britain. George IV (1820-1830). Official Coronation Medal, 1821. Silver, 35mm. By B. Pistrucci. Laureate head l., rev. George IV seated l. in Roman fashion on a curule chair, being crowned by Victory standing behind him, Britannia, Hibernia and Scotia standing before. Eimer 1146, BHM 1070. Some light hairlines in left obverse field, pleasing lustre and high relief, Extremely Fine. Est. 225-275

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

75

Great Britain. England. Middlesex. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens - J. Bebbington, Ching’s Worm Lozenges, London Corres. Soc., Coventry Street, Sise Lane, Kilvington’s, Lackington, Moore’s, Newgate Prison, Pidcock’s, Rupert St., Spence’s Pitt & Fox, Prince of Wales, “Map of France”, Isaac Newton, and Stag and plough; also Isaac Newton Farthing, 1793. A few once lightly cleaned or wiped, a few Fine, but generally Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (39) Est. 300-400

76

Great Britain. England. Middlesex. Robert Orchard, grocer and tea dealer. Farthing Token, 1803. Orchard address, rev. Turk standing among bales. D&H 1061. Uncirculated. Est. 90-120

77

Great Britain. England. Pair of 19th Century Penny Tokens. Norfolk. Norwich. John Barker, draper. Penny, 1811. Two sheep, one reclining, one standing/Norwich castle. Withers 905, D.19. Attractive silvery tone, Choice Extremely Fine; Staffordshire. West Bromwich & Coseley. James Cooksey. Penny, 1812. Withers 1185. About Uncirculated. (2) Est. 100-150

78

Great Britain. England. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens. Somersetshire. Bath - John Howard, Bristol - Niblock & Hunter’s; Staffordshire. Leek; Suffolk. Bungay, Bury - Plough & Fleece, Rockham’s, Guest’s, Haverhill, Ipswich; Sussex. Chichester, Frant, Hastings, Winchelsea; Warwickshire. Birmingham - Shakespeare, hedgehog shield, Dr. Johnson, Bigg’s Gen. Elliot and Dr. Johnson, Birmingham Coining & Copper Co., Stratford, Wilkinson; Yorkshire. Huddersfield, Hull, Leeds, Sheffield, York. One or two once cleaned, generally Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (59) Est. 350-450

79

Great Britain. England. Sussex. Horsham. M. Pintosh. Halfpenny Token, 1791. Laureate George III head r., rev. Anchor with cable. D&H 27. Red highlights, Choice Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

80

Great Britain. England. Worcestershire. Dudley. Penny Token, n.d. (Ca. 1797). View of Dudley Priory, rev. ED cipher between branches, E. Davis Nail Factor legend. D&H 3. Hints of red, Uncirculated. Est. 90-120

81

Great Britain. England. Pair of 19th Century Penny Tokens. Worcestershire. Griffin’s Withymoor Scythe Works. Penny, 1814. View of forge operations/Tools in circle, crossed spades below. Withers 1216. Dark chestnut-brown, Uncirculated; Warwickshire. Birmingham. Birmingham & Risca Copper Co. Penny, 1811. Clasped hands. Withers 296-7. Tiny deposit, About Uncirculated. (2) Est. 100-150

82

Great Britain. Anglesey. Grouping of Druid-head Tokens. Penny Tokens (26) — 1787, 1788. One with incomplete hole, Very Good-Very Fine; Halfpenny tokens (8), 1788, 1791, 1793. Fine-Extremely Fine; also various (mostly English, a few Welsh, Irish, Scotch) low-grade Halfpenny Tokens (51) and Penny tokens (23), the former generally 18th Century, the latter nearly all early 19th Century. Some with problems. (108) Est. 250-300

83

Great Britain. England. Mixed Token Lot. Includes: 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens of Somersetshire, Bath - Bladud/Tea urn; Wiltshire, Holt’s Fame/Legend. Both Extremely Fine with hints of red; additional Holt’s and issues of Hampshire, Emsworth; Lincolnshire, Chelsea; and Wilkinson - with Gibbs collection envelopes. Fine-Extremely Fine; 19th Century Silver Tokens of: Nottinghamshire. Mansfield. Stanton, Hancock, Wakefield Shilling, 1812. Extremely Fine; Bristol Shilling, 1811. Very Good; and “Evasion” Halfpennies: Payable at Williams/Music Charms, George Rules/North Wales, Oliver Cromwell/South Wales, Thomas Seymour/South Wales. Crude About Fine-Fine; also 6 ex-Gibbs Collection examples of Model Coinage, Very Fine-Uncirculated. (19) Est. 150-200

84

Ireland. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens: Dublin. `God Grant Peace’, B.O.B. (spinning wheel), Fyan’s, Parker’s (2); County Wexford, Enniscorthy. Castle by the sea (2); County Wicklow, Cronebane (13, var). Bishop’s Bust, including Justice reverse mule (D&H 63). One or two Fine, the rest Very Fine-Extremely Fine. The Dublin-B.O.B. token includes exGibbs collection envelope. (20) Est. 225-275

85

Ireland. Dublin. James Hilles, Ironmonger. Penny and Halfpenny Tokens, 1813. Two men working at rolling mill, rev. sprig of shamrock. Withers 1815, 1820; Davis Dublin 11, 58. The Penny accompanied by old Hans Schulman envelope. Extremely Fine-AU and Extremely Fine. (2) Est. 90-120

86 86

Italian States. Sicily. Under Norman rule. Roger (Ruggiero) II (1105-1154). Gold Tari, Madinat Siqilliyah AH 5xx. Third series, struck 1140-1154 at Messina and Palermo. 1.03 gms. Circular Kufic inscriptions around pellet, al-Mu’tazz billah, rev. Long cross dividing IC-XC, NI-KA. Biaggi 1220, Spahr 66. Edge slightly irregular as is typical, Very Fine. Est. 250-300

Page 11


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

91

Poland. Pair. Sigismund (Zygmunt) III (15871632). Ort, 1621. Crowned and armored bust r., wearing ruff, holding sword and orb; legend ends: RVS.PRVS.M (the second`V’ is an inverted `A’), rev. Crowned Arms dividing date. Scarce. Weakness at center; and Groschen (Grosz koronny), 1608. KM 37, 11. Both About Very Fine. (2) Est. 75-100

92

Poland. First Republic. 10 Zlotych, nd (1925). 900th Anniversary of Poland. Crowned bust of Poland’s first king Boleslaw Chrobry left, rev. Polish eagle. Fr.116, Y.32. Good lustre, Uncirculated. Est. 200-250

87 87

Italian States. Sicily. Under Norman rule. William (Guglielmo) II (1166-1189). Gold Tari, mm AH(5)x9. Struck at Messina and Palermo. 1.31 gms. Circular Kufic inscriptions around pelleted cross, alMusta`izz billah, rev. Long cross dividing IC-XC, NIKA. Biaggi 1227, Spahr 102. Very Fine. Est. 225-275

88 88

Papal - Vatican City. Pius XI (1922-1939). 100 Lire, 1936. Anno XV. Bust right clad in vestments, rev. Nimbate figure of Jesus standing facing, child at His feet. KM 10. Mintage of 8,239. A few minor contact marks, About Uncirculated-Uncirculated. Est. 650-750

93 93

Russia. Peter II (1727-1730). Ruble, 1728. Moscow, Kadashevsky mint. Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right, rev. Crowned, cruciform monogram Πs, “II” in angles, date across at center. Bit.54, Sev 978, KM 182.2. Some minor laminations and contact marks, pale slate gray, Very Fine. Est. 700-800

94

Russia. Paul I (1796-1801). Ruble, 1801 CM-AΝ. St. Petersburg. Crowned cruciform Πs, I at center, rev. Four-line legend, initials below on tablet with outer scrollwork. Bit.46, Sev 2487, Cr 101a. Minor laminations, slate gray tone with pale tungsten blue undertone, About Very Fine. Est. 300-350

95

Russia. Alexander III (1881-1894). Ruble, 1886. Head right, rev. Imperial eagle. Some contact marks and small reverse nick, About Very Fine. Bit.60, Sev 3968, Y 46. Est. 150-200

96

Russia. Nicholas II (1894-1917). 5 Rubles, 1898 AΓ. Fr.180, Y.62. Choice About Uncirculated. Est. 225-275

97

Russia. Nicholas II (1894-1917). 5 Rubles, 1904 AP. Fr.180, Y.62. Uncirculated. Est. 225-275

89 89

Norway. Oskar II of Sweden (1872-1907). 20 Kroner, 1902. Head right, rev. Crowned Arms in spray. Last year of type 50,400 pieces struck. KM 355. NGC MS 65. Est. 650-750

90 90

Norway. Oskar II of Sweden (1872-1905). 20 Kroner, 1902. Bare head right, rev. Crowned Arms in spray. Fr.17, KM 355. About Uncirculated. Est. 400-450

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

98 98

Russia. Nicholas II (1894-1917). 5 Rubles, 1904 AP. Fr.180, Y.62. Choice Uncirculated. Est. 250-300

99

Russia. Nicholas II (1894-1917). 5 Rubles, 1904 AP. Fr.180, Y.62. Choice About Uncirculated. Est. 225-275

100

Russia, Nicholas II (1894-1917). Medal for Bravery, 4th Class. Award # 118867. Nicholas II head l. Toned Good Very Fine. Est. 100-150

103

Scotland. Alexander III (1249-1286). Second Coinage, ca. 1280-. Penny. 1.37 gms. Crowned head left, scepter before, wedge-tailed “R”, unbarred “A”, rev. 20 points; long cross with mullets of five points. S.5056. Light gray, Very Fine. Est. 125-175

104

Scotland. John Baliol (1292-1296). Second Coinage. Penny. 1.27 gms. Crowned head left, scepter before, rev. 20 points; Long cross with mullets of five points. S.5071. Very Scarce. Deep gray over some old pinscratches, weak obverse center, full legends with clear regnal name, Fine. Est. 200-250

Very Rare Saarland Essai 100 Franken in Gold

105 105

Scotland. David II (1329-1371). Third (Light) Coinage, 1367-1371. Groat. Edinburgh. 3.87 gms. Trefoils in tressure. Crowned bust left with scepter within tressure, rev. Long cross and mullets. S.5125. Nice old toning, Very Fine.\nEx P. Finn Collection. Est. 450-500

101 101

Saarland. French protectorate. Essai 100 Franken in Gold. Arms, rev. Value, `ESSAI’ in small letters above. Very Rare with a mintage of just 50 pieces. Schaaf S.393, KM E7. Small spot on obverse likely from adhesive residue. Lustrous, Uncirculated. Est. 2000-2500 106 106

Scotland. David II (1329-1371). Third (Light) Coinage, 1367-1371. Groat. Edinburgh. 3.72 gms. Trefoils in tressure. Crowned bust left with scepter within tressure, rev. Long cross and mullets. S.5125. Irregular, jagged edge, soft iridescent hues, sharp portrait, Good Very Fine. Est. 300-400

107

Scotland. David II (1329-1371). Second Coinage, after ca. 1333. Penny. Edinburgh (?) 1.02 gms. Crowned head left, scepter before, rev. Long cross with mullets. S.5087. Old cabinet toning over obverse pecks, light ghosting, About Very Fine. Est. 150-200

A Small Collection of the Coins of Scotland 102

Scotland. Alexander III (1249-1286). Second Coinage, ca. 1280-. Penny. 1.21 gms. Crowned head left, scepter before, rev. 24 points; long cross with mullets of six points. S.5055. Somewhat raggedy edge, toned over light porosity, About Very Fine. Est. 100-150

Page 13


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

108

Scotland. Robert II (1371-1390). Groat. Edinburgh. 3.72 gms. Crowned bust of Robert, first Scottish king of the Stewart line, left, scepter, star at base before, trefoils within tressure, rev. Long cross and mullets. S.5131. Numerous old pinscratches, broad flan, Very Fine. Est. 200-250

109

Scotland. Robert II (1371-1390). Groat. Edinburgh. 2.75 gms. Crowned bust of Robert, first Scottish king of the Stewart line, left, scepter, star at base before, trefoils within tressure, rev. Long cross and mullets. S.5131. Clipped, flan crack, About Very Fine. Est. 75-100

113

Scotland. James IV (1488-1513). Billon Plack. 1.97 gms. Shield in tressure, crowns above and at sides, no QRA, rev. X within ornate cross, crowns in angles. S.5349. Die shift and doubling obverse, deep gray, About Very Fine. Est. 125-175

114

Scotland. James IV (1488-1513). Second issue. Billon Penny. Edinburgh. 0.73 gms. Small crowned neat bust facing, rev. Long cross, alternating fleurs and crowns in angles. S.5360. Weak centers, Fine. Est. 90-120

115

Scotland. James IV (1488-1513). Second issue. Billon Penny. Edinburgh. 0.66 gms. Small crowned neat bust facing, rev. Long cross, alternating fleurs and crowns in angles. S.5360. Very Fine. Est. 150-200

116

Scotland. James V (1513-1542). Third Coinage, 1538-1542. Billon Bawbee. 1.80 gms. Crowned thistle; I-5, rev. Crown on saltire cross, flanked by lis. S.5384. Pale charcoal gray, Very Fine. Est. 100-150

117

Scotland. Mary, before marriage (1542-1558). Pair of Billon Bawbee. Edinburgh. 1.79 and 1.98 gms. Crowned thistle dividing MR, rev. Plain saltire cross through crown, flanked by cinquefoils. S.5432. One with light deposits, About Very Fine-Very Fine. (2) Est. 150-200

118

Scotland. Mary, before marriage. Billon Plack, 1557. 1.87 gms. Crowned Arms, M-R, rev. Ornate cross with plain cross in center and crowns in angles. S.5437. Double-striking on obverse, toned Very Fine. Est. 125-175

119

Scotland. Trio of Minors: Mary, before marriage (1542-1558). Lion (“hardhead”), 1558; Francis and Mary (1558-1560). Lion, (1559); James VI (15671625). After accession to the English Throne. Eighteenpenny Groat; S.5445, 5449, 5512. Crude Fine-About Very Fine.(3) Est. 125-175

110 110

Scotland. Robert III (1390-1406). Heavy Coinage, 1390-ca. 1403. Groat. Edinburgh. 2.85 gms. Somewhat rough, crowned facing bust within tressure, triplets of pellets at tressure cusps, rev. Long cross, triplet of pellets in angles S.5164. Decent details on face, nice old tone, Very Fine. Est. 350-450

110 111

Scotland. Robert III (1390-1406). Heavy Coinage, 1390-ca. 1403. Groat. Edinburgh. 2.85 gms. Fleur de lis in legend. Rough, crowned facing bust within tressure, triplets of pellets at tressure cusps, rev. Long cross, triplet of pellets in angles S.5164A. Old toning over minor obverse peck, Very Fine. Est. 350-450

112

Scotland. James III (1460-1488). Light issue, ca. 1482. Groat. Edinburgh. 2.40 gms. Small facing bust, wearing low crown with five fleurs, within tressure, rev. Long cross, triplet of pellets and five-pointed mullets in angles; VILLA EDENBEOVRGE. S.5280. Somewhat weak strike, light gray, Fine. Est. 225-275

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120 120

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Second Coinage. Half Merk, 1572. 6.74 gms. Crowned Arms, value 68, rev. Ornate cross with crowns and thistles in alternate angles. S.5478. A few old test scratches, pale slate gray, Good Fine. Est. 200-250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

121

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Second Coinage. Half Merk, 1573. 6.17 gms. Crowned Arms, value 68, rev. Ornate cross with crowns and thistles in alternate angles. S.5478. Some old test marks at centers, Good Fine. Est. 200-250

126 126

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). As James I, after accession to the English Throne, 1603-1625. 12 Shillings. 5.58 gms. Crowned bust right, XII behind, rev. Shield with Arms. S.5505. Weak obverse center, toned over a few old test scratches, About Very Fine. Est. 300-400

127

Scotland. Quartet of AE Turners: James VI (15671625). As James I, after accession to the English Throne, 1603-1625. Pair of AE Two Pence (Turners). Issue of 1614. Triple thistle, rev. Lion rampant left, two pellets behind; FRANCIE ET HIBERNIE REX. S.5523. Typical surfaces with minor porosity, Fine-About Very Fine; Charles I (1625-1649). Earl of Stirling Turner and Coinage of 1642, etc Turner. S.5598a, 5602. About Very Fine-Very Fine. (4) Est. 175-225

128

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Pair of Minors: After accession. Two Shillings. 0.92 gms. Crowned rose, rev. Crowned thistle; pre-accession. Billon Eighteenpenny Groat. 1.51 gms. S.5509, 5512. Attractive old toning, both Very Fine and Choice for type. (2) Est. 150-250

122 122

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Seventh Coinage. 10 Shillings, 1594. 5.94 gms. Armored, bare-headed bust right, rev. Crowned, triple-headed thistle. S.5493. Slate gray. Somewhat weak obverse, Fine/Very Fine. Est. 250-350

123

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Trio of Minors: 5 Shillings, 159x. Bare-headed , armored bust right; Thistle Merk, 1602; Billon Eighteenpenny Groat. S. 5494, 5497, 5512. The first About Very Fine with numerous test pinscratches, the second toned Fine/About Very Good with reverse scratch; the latter light deposits, About Very Fine. (3) Est. 125-175

124

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). Eighth Coinage. Quarter and Eighth Thistle Merk, 1602. 1.59 and 0.79 gms. Crowned Arms, revs. Crowned Thistle. S.5499, 5500. Somewhat crude as typical, the first slight crease, the latter toned deep gray, Very Fine. (2) Est. 200-250

125

Scotland. James VI (1567-1625). As James I, after accession to the English Throne, 1603-1625. 30 Shillings. 14.61 gms. King on horseback right, wearing Scottish crown, rev. Garnished shield with English Arms in the first and fourth quarters. S.5503. Weakly struck centers and some minor flan flaws, toned Fine. Est. 200-250 129 129

Scotland. Charles I (1625-1649). Third coinage, 1637-1642. Falconer’s second issue. 12 Shillings. 5.82 gms. Thistle before legend, “F” above crown. Crowned bust left, XII behind, rev. Crowned Arms flanked by crowned C-R diamond below each letter. S.5562. Reverse diebreak above “C”, slate gray with hints of deep russet, Choice Fine. Est. 200-250

Page 15


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

130

135

130

Scotland. Charles II (1649-1685). Merk, 1669. 6.22 gms. Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right, small thistle below, rev. Cruciform Arms, crowned monogram CC in angles, value XIII/4 at center. S.5611. Pleasing old slate gray tone, Very Fine. Est. 350-400

135

Scotland. William II [III of England] (1694-1702). 20 Shillings, 1695. 9.02 gms. Laureate, draped bust left, “20” below, rev. Crowned Arms. S.5686. Pale lavender-gray toning over faint haymarking and some test pinscratches, About Very Fine. Est. 200-250

131

Scotland. Charles II (1649-1685). Pair of Silver Minors: Quarter Dollar, 1682, and Eighth Dollar, 1676. 6.43 and 3.11 gms. Laureate and draped bust left, small “F” before drapery, revs. Crowned cruciform Arms, triple thistles in angles, interlinked monogram CC at center. S.5620, 5622. The first somewhat shallow strike, some pinscratches, the latter light graffiti on cheek, Fine. (2) Est. 150-200

136

Scotland. William II [III of England] (1694-1702). 10 Shillings, 1696. 4.45 gms. Draped and peruked bust left, “10” below, rev. Crowned Arms. S.5687. Light adjustment marks at edge, and test marks, toned Fine/About Very Fine. Est. 100-150

137

Scotland. William II [III of England] (1694-1702). 5 Shillings, 1696. 2.35 gms. Draped and peruked bust left, “5” below, rev. Crowned triple thistle. S.5688. Light slate-gray, About Very Fine. Est. 150-200

138

Scotland. Anne (1702-1714). Pair of 5 Shillings, 1705/4 and 1706. 2.09 and 2.29 gms. Draped bust left, “5” below, revs. Crowned triple thistle. S.5703, 5706. Light hairlines, toned Fine-About Very Fine. (2) Est. 125-175

139

Scotland. Lot of 18th Century Halfpenny Tokens. Angusshire. Dundee - infirmary, Forfar - castle (edge bruise); Lanarkshire. Glasgow. River-god (4); Lothian. Edinburgh. Archibald’s (3), Hutchinson’s (10, var. including contemporary counterfeits). Very FineExtremely Fine. (19) Est. 200-250

140

Scotland. Lot of Scottish 1796 Halfpenny Tokens and Welsh 18th Century Tokens: Anggushire. Montrose. Woman spinning. D&H 28; Lothian. Edinburgh. Filtering stone. D&H 1; Harrison’s, buckle maker. D&H 20; Leith. Ship and boat by fort/Woman seated. D&H 59; The Welsh consists of 1788, 1789 and 1791 Druid head Halfpennies, a 1788 Druid head Penny and a 1796 Swansea John Voss Halfpenny. The Scottish Extremely Fine, the Welsh, Fine-Good Very Fine. (9) Est. 125-175

132

133

Scotland. Charles II (1649-1685).Sixteenth Dollar, 1681. 1.59 gms. Laureate and draped bust left, small “F” before drapery, rev. St. Andrew’s Cross, crown at center, thistle, rose, lis and harp in angles. S.5624. Light gray, Nearly Very Fine. Est. 200-250 Scotland. James VII [II of England] (1685-1689). 10 Shillings, 1687. 4.44 gms. Laureate and draped bust right, rev. Cruciform Arms, St. Andrews cross at center. S.5641. Slate gray toning over some old test pinscratches, Fine. Est. 150-200

134 134

Scotland. William & Mary (1689-1694). 10 Shillings, 1691. 4.54 gms. Conjoined, draped busts left, “10” below; legend ends: GRA, rev. Crowned Arms. S.5660. Rare. Adjustment marks left edge, old toning, Nearly Very Fine. Est. 300-400

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

141

142

The Coinage of Scotland, Illustrated from the cabinet of Thomas Coats, esq., of Ferguslie and other collections by Burns, Edward — Covers the coinage from David I AD 1124 to Anne AD 1707 — Adams and Charles Black, Publishers. Book Condition: Used - Very Good. 1887. 3 volumes. Large 4to. Three quarter crushed morocco over marbled boards. Endpapers marbled. Top edges gilt. Spines in six compartments, with raised bands, decorated in gilt. Vol. 1: xxiii, 365 pp.; Vol. 2: xviii, 556 pp.; Vol. 3: vi pp. + 78 heliogravure plates with accompanying text. Rubbing to raised bands, edges of binding, corners, leather missing in spots. Overall a sound copy. Est. 250-500 Spain. Reyes Catolicós, Fernando y Isabel (14741504). 4 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 13.64 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/IIII, rev. Bundle of 6 arrows and yoke, “D” in angle. Cayon 2670. Dark area reverse periphery, Very Fine. Est. 150-200

146 146

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.15 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Overall well-struck, reverse toned deep gray with rosé hues, About Extremely Fine. Est. 300-400

147

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.36 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Some dark areas over light deposits on obverse, flatly struck reverse center, Very Fine. Est. 250-350

148

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.27 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Some dark areas in obverse peripheries, dark areas over reverse corrosion, Very Fine. Est. 125-175

143 143

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.49 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Minor doubling, some lustre, About Extremely Fine. Est. 300-400

144

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.21 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Large edge split, otherwise Very Fine. Est. 250-350

145

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 27.47 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3746. Some dark spots obverse periphery, Very Fine. Est. 275-350

149 149

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd S-U. `U’ tumbada. Sevilla. 27.21 gms. Crowned Arms, So/VIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “U” on its side in one angle. Cayon 3750. Rare. Some weakness in peripheries, but generally well-struck, Good Very Fine. Est. 700-800

Page 17


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

150 150

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, (15)90 S-H. Sevilla. 27.48 gms. Crowned Arms, S/o/VIII/H at left, vertical date, facing inward, at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3810, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 134. Margins largely flatly struck, small edge split and dark spot, About Extremely Fine. Est. 700-800

152 152

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd (ca. 1590) T-M. Toledo. 27.25 gms. Crowned Arms, o/T above M within circle at left, o/VIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, annulets in outer arcs. Cayon 3752, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 139; No. 206. Some flatness of strike in margins as is typical, Very Fine. Est. 350-450

A Pair of Valladolid Cob 8 Reales

151 151

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, 1591 (S-H). Sevilla. 27.45 gms. Crowned Arms, (S/o/VIII/H) not struck up on left, vertical date facing inward on right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3822, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 134. Margins generally flatly struck with some dark areas lower obverse, small edge split, full, clear date, About Extremely Fine. Est. 800-1000

153 153

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd waves-A. Valladolid. 27.41 gms. Crowned Arms, three waves, pellet above and below at left, o/A (with no cross-bar)/8/pellet at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, annulets around. Calicó y Trigo Tipo 144. Very Rare. Edge split at bottom, pleasing light tone, Extremely Fine. Est. 900-1200

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

160

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd TM. Toledo. 13.51 and 13.78 gms. Crowned Arms, o/T/m within circle at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3612, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 211, No. 336. One with dark areas and corrosion in obverse margins, the other strong centers, weak peripheries, About Extremely Fine-Extremely Fine. (2) Est. 200-250

161

Spain. Carlos IV (1788-1808). Escudo, 1791 MF. Madrid. Armored bust r., rev. Crowned Arms within Order chain. KM 434. About Fine. Est. 150-200

154 154

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd waves-A. Valladolid. 27.45 gms. Crowned Arms, three waves, triplet of pellets above and below at left, o/A (with no cross-bar)/8/pellet at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, annulets around. Calicó y Trigo Tipo 145, Cayon 3755. Upper left reverse castle flatly struck, lightly toned, Extremely Fine. Very Rare. Est. 900-1200

155

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd GF. Granada. 13.55 gms. Crowned Arms, o/G/o at left, o/F/o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3550, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 173, No. 273. Nice surfaces, good strike for type, Extremely Fine. Est. 200-250

156

157

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Pair of Cob 4 Reales, nd S-D. Sevilla. 13.50 and 12.26 gms. Crowned Arms, S-o/IIII, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon, “D” in one angle. Cayon 3605. One dark gray, About Extremely Fine-Extremely Fine. (2) Est. 200-250 Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, 1590 S-D. Sevilla. 13.69 gms. Crowned Arms, S/o/IIII/D at left, vertical date facing downwards at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3636. Only bottom halves of the digits of the date struck up, but clear, some flatness of strike in peripheries and reverse center, About Extremely Fine. Est. 250-300

158

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, 1595 S-B. Sevilla. 13.71 gms. Crowned Arms, S/o/IIII/B at left, vertical date facing downwards at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3683. Only bottom halves of the digits of the date struck up, but clear, peripheries largely flat, good details at centers, Extremely Fine. Est. 225-275

159

Spain. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd TM. Toledo. 13.75 gms. Crowned Arms, o/T/m within circle at left, o/IIII (not struck up) at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3612, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 211, No. 336. Flatness of strike right obverse periphery, weak lions, well-detailed castles on reverse, About Extremely Fine. Est. 150-200

162 162

Sweden. Erik XIV(1560-1568). 16 Öre Klippe, 1564. Emergency issue. E.R, spray above, on crowned shield, +-+, 16-OR, rev. Crowned Arms dividing date. SM 45, Hobson 23. Some graininess, otherwise Good Very Fine. Est. 250-350

163

Sweden. Johan III (1568-1592). 1 Öre, (15)75. Armored figure of the king standing facing in full regalia, holding sword, flanked by last digits of the date, rev. Crowned Arms, I-OR. SM 71. Some weakness at centers, pale purple-gray, Very Fine. Est. 100-150

164

Sweden. Johan III (1568-1592). 1 Öre, (15)76. Armored figure of the king standing facing in full regalia, holding sword, flanked by last digits of the date, rev. Crowned Arms, I-OR. SM 71. Some obverse doublestriking and minor weakness of strike, but overall good details, About Extremely Fine. Est. 125-175

Page 19


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

168

Sweden. Oskar I (1844-1859). 2 Riksdaler Riksmynt, 1857. Bare head r., rev. Crowned Arms supported by crowned lions. KM 694. One-year type. Flan flaw on head, pale purple and blue-gray tone, Extremely Fine. Est. 150-250

169

Sweden. Karl XV, Adolf (1859-1872). Riksdaler Specie (4 Riksdaler RM), 1871 ST. Bare head r., rev. Crowned Arms supported by crowned lions. KM 726. One-year type. Some friction hairlines in the fields, lightly toned, Extremely Fine. Est. 150-200

170

Switzerland. Basel. Guldentaler, (15)70. Nimbate, imperial double-headed eagle, “60” on orb on breast, rev. Cantonal Arms in quadrilobe. HMZ 2-60i. Evidence of mount removal reverse 12:00, small graffiti letters reverse center, otherwise Good Very Fine. Very Scarce type. Est. 200-250

171

Switzerland. Lot of 17th-18th Century Silver and Billon Cantonal Minors. Bern, ½ Batzen 1770, Kreuzer 1793; Freiburg, 7 Kreuzer 17(8)8; Helvetian Republic. ½ Batzen 1799 (KM A5); St. Gall, Pfennig, nd (ca. 1750); Sitten, Batzen (164)4 (graffiti `x’), ½ Batzen (16)46; Zürich, 10 Schilling 1751, Schilling 1730, Rappen, nd. Fine-Good Very Fine. (10) Est. 125-175

172

Turkey. Ottoman Empire. Ahmet III (AH 11151143/1703-1730 AD). Zeri Islamboul, accession year AH 1115. Initial mark md aleph. Toughra, rev. Tulip within “b” of “duriba”. KM 173. Some contact marks, Good Very Fine. Est. 150-200

173

Turkey. Ottoman Empire. `Abd al-Mejid (18391861). Crimean War Medal - Kirim Harbi Madalyasi, AH 1271/1855. Silver, 36.9mm. Toughra with “Qrim” and date within wreath, rev. Cannon, mortar, anchor and banners. Edge: 3289 JOSEPH BLOOD 1ST BATTN 17TH REGT. Holed for suspension, no hangar or ribbon, two lower rim nicks, Very Fine. Est. 100-150

174

Lot of 17th-18th Century European AEs. Includes issues of various Netherlands Provinces, Spanish Netherlands, Italian States, France, Spain, Sweden, Liege, Livonia, Hungary and Great Britain. Some somewhat better pieces, should be viewed. Very Good-Extremely Fine. Est. 150-200

165 165

Sweden. Kristina (1632-1654). 2 Mark, nd (1651), crossed axes. Laureate head r. of the famed, unconventional Swedish queen, rev. Three crowns. KM 210. Hairlines at centers, attractive light tone,Very Fine. Est. 200-250

166 166

Sweden. Gustaf III (1771-1792). Riksdaler, 1777 OL. Peruked head r., rev. Crowned oval Arms within Order chain, value across 1.-RD, 3.-D S.-M. KM 514. Pale purple-gray with white-gray highlights, About Extremely Fine. Est. 200-250

North and South America 167 167

Sweden. Gustaf IV Adolf (1792-1809). Riksdaler, 1794 OL. FOLKET. Peruked head r., rev. Crowned oval Arms within Order chain. KM 540.3. Minor flan flaw reverse edge, good lustre, Extremely Fine. Est. 400-500

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175

Bolivia. Carlos III (1759-1788). Cob 2 Reales, (1)760 P-V. Potosí. Arms of Castile and Leon quartered by cross, rev. Pillars, value, date, etc. across. KM 43. Oblongish flan. About Very Fine. Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

181

176 176

Canada. Victoria (1837-1901). 25 Cents, 1885. Curved top 5. Medium gray. KM 5. Very scarce date. PCGS XF 45. Est. 1200-1400

181

Canada. George V (1910-1936). Sovereign, 1911 C. British types. Russet hues. Fr.2. Lustrous Uncirculated. Est. 375-450

177

Canada. Victoria (1837-1901). 5 Cents, 1871. KM 2. Sharp details, attractive deep gray. NGC AU 53. Est. 125-175

182

Canada. George V (1910-1936). 50 Cents, 1917. KM 25. A sharp example with ample lustre. NGC AU 58. Est. 325-375

178

Canada. Victoria (1837-1901). 5 Cents, 1901. KM 2. Pleasing dappled lustre. NGC MS 62. Est. 150-200

183

Canada. Pair of encapsulated minors: George V. 10 Cents, 1919. PCGS MS 64; Edward VII. 25 Cents, 1910. NGC VF 30. (2) Est. 150-200

184

179 179

Canada. Edward VII (1901-1910). 25 Cents, 1902 H. Heaton. KM 11. Satiny surfaces with soft peripheral golden hues, a handsome example. PCGS MS 64. Est. 700-800

184

Canada. George V (1910-1936). Nickel 5 Cents, 1925. Key date. KM 29. NGC AU 50. Est. 450-550

185

Canada. George V (1910-1936). Nickel 5 Cents, 1925. Key date. KM 29. NGC XF 45. Est. 275-350

186

Canada. George V (1910-1936). Nickel 5 Cents, 1926. Near “6”. KM 29. NGC XF 45. Est. 90-120

187

Canada. George VI (1936-1952). 25 Cents, 1947. Maple leaf. KM 35. Lustrous linen-white. PCGS MS 65. Est. 150-200

188

Canada. George VI (1936-1952). 5 Cents, 1937. Dot. KM 33. PCGS MS 65. Est. 150-200

189

Chile. Antofagasta Province. Lot of Nitrate Mine Tokens. Oficina Curina. Compañia Salitrera “El Loa”. Green-black-red, and green-red Vulcanite Pesos (35); Red Vulcanite Pesos (3), ca. 1906-1907. Leslie 210-d. Generally Very Fine-Choice Extremely Fine. (38) Est. 75-100

180 180

Canada. Edward VII (1901-1910). 25 Cents, 1910. KM 11a. Bold devices, russet highlights. NGC MS 63. Est. 500-600

Page 21


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

190

Colombia. Order of Medical Merit ‘José Fernández Madrid’. Badge. (Instituted 1950, awarded to military medical personnel for acts of courage or outstanding service to science or military medicine). Green enamels. 50mm. Cross on wreath, portrait of Madrid at center, caduceus and legend on back. Extremely Fine. Suspended from a yellow, blue and red bordered white moiré sash; also small red enameled cross, likely private order. (2) Est. 50-75 193 193

Guatemala. Republica. 10 Quetzales, 1926. Arms, rev. Quetzal seated atop an engraved pillar. Fr.49, KM 245. About Uncirculated. Est. 775-850

194 194

Guatemala. Republica. On the Extension of the Railroad to Guatemala City (1884). Medal. Gold. 20 mm, 8.0 gms. Bust ¾ right of the country’s first liberal dictator, Justo Rufino Barrios within a wreath decorated with an “1871 Revolution” ribbon, rev. Locomotive steaming right, spray below, within circle; PRIMERA LOCOMOTORA EN LA CAPITAL (lit altar). Minor friction hairlines, lightly toned. Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. Est. 450-550

195

Mexico. Carlos y Juana “la Loca” (1516-1556). 4 Reales, nd Mo-O (struck 1542-1555). Mexico City. 13.72 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M-O, rev. Crowned Pillars, PLVS ULTR/4 across. Cayon 2956, KM 0012. Dark area right margin reverse with some corrosion on edge, thick flan, Very Fine. Est. 150-200

196

Mexico. Carlos y Juana “la Loca” (1516-1556). 4 Reales, nd Mo-O (struck 1542-1555). Mexico City. 13.17 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M-O, rev. Crowned Pillars, PLVS ULTR/4 across. Cayon 2956, KM 0012. Some obverse surface marks and flatness of strike in margins, About Fine/Very Fine. Est. 100-150

197

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd Mo-O. Mexico City. 27.41 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O-8, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3720, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 160. Flatness of strike in peripheries, well struck centers, Very Fine. Est. 250-350

191 191

192

Dominican Republic. Order of Merit of Duarte, Sánchez y Mella. Set of Cross and Breast Star. (Instituted 9 September 1954, the principal Order of the Dominican Republic, awarded to both civilian and military personnel for distinguished service). Gilt Silver and enamels. Cross: 90mm (including wreath suspender). Narrow blue enamel cross on white enameled cross on rayed plaque; central medallion, gold legend on blue around cameos of Juan Pablo Duarte, Francisco del Rosario Sánchez and Matias Ramon Mella on white enamel. Dominican Arms on back. On wreath suspender with ribbon tie. Breast Star: 76mm. Designs as Cross. Maker’s plaque on back: ANTIGUA VILARDEBO Y RIERA .HABANA. FABRICADO EN CUBA. Minor scuffing, some hairline enamel cracking on Star and minor contact marks on metal, About Extremely Fine. With blue-bordered white moiré sash. Set in blue case. Est. 300-400 AE Pair. French Colonies. 12 Deniers (Sol), 1767 A. KM 6. Hairline test marks on reverse, Fine; Brazil. Joao VI (1706-1750). 10 Reis, 1746. No dots. KM 142.4. Minor porosity in periphery, Very Fine. Est. 75-100

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

203

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.70 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Natural edge split, Very Fine. Est. 200-250

204

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 12.85 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Irregular edge, well-struck, About Extremely Fine. Est. 225-275

205

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.43 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Dark area obverse center, minor doubling, overall well-struck, About Extremely Fine. Est. 200-250

206

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.58 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Some flatness in peripheries, Very Fine. Est. 200-250

207

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Pair of Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.49 and 13.65 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. One with dark area reverse center, Very Fine. (2) Est. 300-350

208

Mexico. Carlos III (1759-1788). 8 Reales (ca. 17771783) Mo FF. Mexico City. Salved, from the wreck of the El Cazador. Rough obverse margins, decent reverse. NGC Shipwreck GENUINE. Est. 50-75

209

Mexico. Carlos III (1759-1788). 8 Reales (ca. 17771783) Mo FF. Mexico City. Salved, from the wreck of the El Cazador. Rough murky obverse, decent reverse. NGC Shipwreck GENUINE. Est. 50-75

210

Mexico. Carlos III (1759-1788). 8 Reales (ca. 17771783) Mo FF. Mexico City. From the wreck of the El Cazador. Murky obverse and reverse. NGC Shipwreck GENUINE. Est. 40-60

211

Mexico. Carlos III (1759-1788). 8 Reales, 177x (ca. 1777-1779) Mo FF. Mexico City. From the wreck of the El Cazador. Metal adhesion obverse, murky but clear types and partial legends. NGC Shipwreck GENUINE. Est. 40-60

198 198

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.03 gms. Crowned Arms, o/IIII above uncertain letter (A?) at left, o/M at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cf.Calicó y Trigo Tipo 241. Some doubling in legends, wellstruck, attractive light toning, About Extremely Fine. Est. 300-400

199

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.69 gms. Crowned Arms, o/IIII at left, o/M at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Calicó y Trigo Tipo 243; No. 404. Fullystruck crown, Good Very Fine. Est. 250-300

200

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.59 gms. Crowned Arms, o/IIII at left, o/M at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Calicó y Trigo Tipo 243; No. 404. Dark area reverse center, full-struck crown, About Extremely Fine. Est. 225-275

201 201

202

Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.71 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Well-struck legends, Very Fine. Est. 225-275 Mexico. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 4 Reales, nd Mo. Mexico City. 13.72 gms. Crowned Arms, o/M/O at left, o/IIII at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3572, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 244; No. 105. Very Fine. Est. 200-250

Page 23


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

212

Lot of Spanish Colonial Silver. Mexico: 2 Reales, 1766 M, ½ Reales, 1738 MF, 1746 M, 1758 M, 1774 FM; cob 2 Reales (holed) and Real; Bolivia, Cob Real 1757, 2 Reales 1774; also el-Cazador salved 1783 8 Reales, and Spain. 2 Reales, 1682, Segovia. Very Good-Extremely Fine. (11) Est. 175-225

213

Newfoundland. Victoria, (1837-1901). 50 Cents, 1885. Better date. KM 6. Light gray. PCGS VF 35. Est. 350-400

218 218 214 214

Newfoundland. George VI (1936-1952). 5 Cents, 1945 C. KM 19a. Frosty lustre on lovely satin silver surfaces highlights meticulous types. NGC MS 66. Est. 350-450

215

Newfoundland. George VI (1936-1952). 5 Cents, 1945 C. KM 19a. A bold, lustrous example. NGC MS 65. Est. 200-250

216

Newfoundland. George VI (1936-1952). 5 Cents, 1945 C. KM 19a. Lovely snowy white silver. NGC MS 64. Est. 60-90

217

Nicaragua. Order of Miguel Larreynaga. Star. (Instituted 16 September 1968, awarded for service to Nicaragua and humanity in the fields of diplomacy and international relations). Gilt Silver and enamels. 70mm (including top medallion). By Cejalvo, Madrid. Blue framed, white enamel, five-armed cross on radiant plaque, central medallion with gold letters on white enamel, Larreynaga bust at center against red enamel. Suspended from small enameled medallion with Nicaraguan Arms, on red moiré ribbon. Extremely Fine. Set in a red Cejalvo case with miniature lapel badge. Raised Nicaraguan Arms on cover. Case with small stain and minor scuff. Est. 90-120

Peru. Felipe II (1556-1598). Cob 8 Reales, nd P-D (struck 1577-1588). Lima. 27.30 gms. Crowned Arms, */8 at left, P/o/D at right, rev. Quartered Arms of Castile and Leon. Cayon 3706, Calicó y Trigo Tipo 158. Dark area reverse center, minor corrosion, complete legends on full, round flan, weakness at centers but overall well-struck, Very Fine. Est. 400-500

Asia, Africa and the Pacific

219 219

Ceylon. Chola period. Anonymous, ca. 990-1070. Gold Kahavanu. 4.40 gms. Figure standing right, wearing dhoti, holding trisula (trident), three annulets with dots before, srivatsa and other symbol behind, rev. Figure squatting on rectangular chest, holding lotus, legend before: sri lamka vibhu (Most Fortunate Lord of Ceylon). MNI-825var. Good Extremely Fine. Est. 275-350

220

China. Empire, Shensi Province, Hsien-feng (18511861), 1,000 Cash, 71 mm, hsien-feng yüan-pao, rev. boo-san and value, neatly applied stamp bottom margin. Cr. 23-10. Earthen hues, Very Fine. Est. 150-200

Most single item lots can be viewed on our website www. spink.com, but not all multi-piece lots are imaged. Our specialist will gladly describe any multi-piece lot to you via Internet or telephone.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

221 221

224

India. Shakya janapada. Anonymous, 600-500 BC. AR 5 Shana. 6.51 gms. Large pellet within quatrefoil, small pellets in angles, 3 or more bankers’ marks around. Rajgor—. Small deposit in periphery, somewhat bright, Extremely Fine. Est. 225-275

225

India. Shakya janapada. Anonymous, 600-500 BC. AR 5 Shana. 6.38 gms. Very large pellet within pentagon, single pellet outside, 3 bankers’ marks around. Rajgor 531. Somewhat bright, About Extremely Fine. Est. 175-225

Egypt. Malik Fu`ad (1922-1936). Gold 20 `Irsh, AH 1341 - 1923. Bust of the king right wearing civilian garb and tarboosh, rev. al-Mamlakeh al-Misriyeh. Fr.30, KM 339. Trivial hairline on the king’s fez, decent lustre. Uncirculated. Est. 200-250

Coinage of India Early Coinage of Buddha’s Homeland 226 226

222 222

223

Early Coinage of Buddha’s Homeland India. Shakya janapada. Anonymous, 600-500 BC. AR 5 Shana. 7.06 gms. Ornate symbol at center with seven or more bankers’ marks around. Rajgor 535. Attractive medium-gray, Extremely Fine.\nFirst discovered in Narhan in Uttar Pradesh, these Shakya issues constitute perhaps the earliest coinage of India. The Shakya janapada was set on India’s border with Nepal, north of the modern town of Gorakhpur. Historically, the region is most significant as the birthplace of Siddhartha Gautama Buddha, who was born in Lumbini and grew up, some 10 miles away, in the Shakya capital of Kapilvastu. Buddha’s father, Suddhodana was the elected ruler of Shakya. “There lived once upon a time, a king of the Shakya, a scion of the solar race, whose name was Suddhodana. He was pure of conduct and beloved of the Shakya like the autumn moon. He had a wife, splendid, beautiful and steadfast who was called the Great Maya, from her resemblance to Maya the goddess” - Buddha-carnita-kavya I, 1-2 of the second century Indian philosopher and poet, Asvaghosa. It is possible that these early silver coins circulated during the lifetime of Suddhodana and his son, Gautama Buddha. Shakya was later annexed by the Kingdom of Kosala. Est. 225-275 India. Shakya janapada. Anonymous, 600-500 BC. AR 5 Shana. 6.53 gms. Floral symbol at center with pellet and crescent, at least 16 bankers’ marks around. Rajgor 533. About Extremely Fine. Est. 175-225

Kushan Empire. Shaka (ca. 325-345). Gold Dinara. 7.84 gms. King standing ¾ l., head l., sacrificing over altar and holding filleted standard, filleted trident in field, Brahmi letters in left field, below arm, ShaKa in right field, rev. The goddess Ardoksho enthroned facing holding garland and cornucopiae. Cf. Göbl 585, MK 591. Edge split, Extremely Fine. Est. 500-600

227 227

Kushan Empire. Gadahara (ca. 320-350). Gold Dinara. 7.71 gms. King standing ¾ l., head l., sacrificing over altar and holding standard, filleted trident in field, Brahmi Kapan in left field, PiroySa under arm, GaDahar in right field, rev. The goddess Ardoksho enthroned facing holding garland and cornucopiae, tamgha right. MK 608. Very Fine. Est. 500-600

228 228

Kushan Empire. Kipanada (ca. mid 4th Century AD). Gold Dinara. 7.70 gms. King standing ¾ l., head l., sacrificing over altar and holding filleted standard, filleted trident in field, rev. The goddess Ardoksho enthroned facing holding garland and cornucopiae. MK 595. Very Fine. Est. 500-600

Page 25


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

229

India. Jammu & Kashmir. Yasovarman (5th Century AD). Electrum Stater. 7.08 gms. Stylized late Kushan design, kidara on obverse, ka at left and ruler’s name on reverse. Cf. MACW 3649. Minor flatness of strike in margin, Very Fine. Est. 125-150

Independent Kingdoms

Medieval India 230

231

India. Kangra. Ca. 1200-1250. Study group of Billon Jitals. Very stylized bull and horseman designs. Somewhat grainy, Very Good-Very Fine (72) Est. 100-150

236 236

India. Assam. Shiva Simha (1715-1744). Round Rupee, SE 1649, year 14 (1727). Rangpur. 11.36 gms. Persian legends both sides, lion right lower obverse. KM 74. Very Rare. Extremely Fine. While Assam’s coins are generally octagonal with Bengali or Devanagari legends, other shapes and other scripts were also occasionally used. Following a failed attempt by the Mughal Empire to annex Assam, Ahom script denominated Assamese coinage from 1663 to 1696 — motivated likely by a rise in Ahom nationalism. With the coronation of Rudra Simha, an ardent Hindu, Sanskrit inscriptions again became the rule on Assam’s coins, with Ahom used only on some rare ceremonial issues. Persian legends, meanwhile, first appear during Shiva Simha’s reign on silver rupees of the Gargaon and Rangpur mints. Two types are squarish, while the type above is the only round issue, and the first coin to name the mint of Rangpur, the Assamese capital founded by Rudra Simha in 1707. These rare Persian legend types emulate Mughal coins and were likely conceived to greater facilitate trade. Persian legends only occur again on square and octagonal coins of Rajesvara Simha (17511769) in both silver and gold. Est. 800-1000

237

India. Mysore. AE Lot. Tipu Sultan (1782-1799). Low-grade ‘elephant’ Paisa (50), some porous, some with deposits, Fair-Fine; Krishna Raja Wodeyar (1810-1868), AEs (66) — 5, 10 and 20 Cash, mostly lion and Sardula, but a few elephant types. Good-Very Fine; also Kutch. 3 Dokda (83), 1869-1937. Some with dirt and/or scruffy surfaces, Fair-About Very Fine. (199) Est. 225-275

India. Lot of lower-grade Silver and Billon coins, ancient-19th Century, mostly medieval period. Pallas, Pratiharas, a few punchmarked coins, Gupta and Western Satraps Drammas, a few 18th-19th Century Rupees. Fair to About Very Fine. (Approximately 156) Est. 200-300

Sultanate Coinage 232

India. Delhi Sultanate. Muhammad III b. Tughluq (1325-1351). Study group of Billon ‘shadow Caliph’ issues. Tankas in the name of the `shadow Caliph’ al-Hakim II (29); Tankas in the name of the `shadow Caliph’ al-Mustakfi (3); also Kutch. 19th Century Kori (21). Fine-Good Very Fine. (53) Est. 150-250

233

India. Large grouping of Dump AEs, 1300’s-1800’s. Mostly Sultanate - Delhi, Gulbarga, Jaunpur, some Mughal and a small smattering of Princely States. Good to Very Fine. (Approximately 380) Est. 250-350

Mughal Coinage 234

India. Silver Lot, 17th-18th Century. Mughal Empire Rupees of Jahangir (4), including Jalnapur AH 1015 (some test punches), Shahjahan and Muhammad Shah, earlier silver fraction of Mulher; and Rupee of Kuchawan; also East India Company AEs (2). Fine-About Extremely Fine. (10) Est. 125-175

235 235

India. Islamic Gold Religious Token, 19th Century. 10.82 gms. Emulating a Mughal gold issue of Akbar. Kalima in diamond frame, rev. Three-line pseudo legend with “qMI” as date. Extremely Fine. Est. 500-600

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238 238

India. Tripura. Vijaya Manikya (1532-1564). Tanka, SE 1478. 10.47 gms. Lion right, crescent with pellet above, rev. Legend naming Queen Lakshmi Rana Devi. KM South Asia -(date not listed). Very Rare. Good Very Fine. Est. 150-200


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Princely States 243

India. AE Lot: Dhar. Anand Rao III (1860-1898). Paisa, AH 1289 (83). Hanuman running l. with banner. KM 6. Good to Fine; Cambay. Ja`far `Ali Khan (1880-1915). Paisa (30) early 1900’s. Y.6. Very Good-About Very Fine; also Bhutan. Copper and Brass ½ Rupees (79), ca. 1835-1910. Very Good-Very Fine. (192) Est. 125-175

244

India. Hyderabad. Mir Usman `Ali Khan (19111948). Lot of Rupees, AH 1361 (50). Generally, if not all, regnal year 32. Chahar Minar gateway, rev. value in central circle, legend around. Y.63. About Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. (50) Est. 500-550

245

India. Hyderabad. Mir Usman `Ali Khan (19111948). Lot of Rupees, AH 1361 (50). Generally, if not all, regnal year 32. Chahar Minar gateway, rev. value in central circle, legend around. Y.63. About Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. (50) Est. 500-550

246

India. Hyderabad. Mir Usman `Ali Khan (19111948). Lot of Rupees, AH 1361 (20), 1362 (20) and 1364 (10). Chahar Minar gateway, rev. value in central circle, legend around. Y.63. About Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. (50) Est. 500-550

247

India. Hyderabad. Mir Usman `Ali Khan (19111948). Lot of Rupees, AH 1361 (21), 1362 (31), 1364 (10) and 1365 (8). Chahar Minar gateway, rev. value in central circle, legend around. Y.63. About Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. (70) Est. 700-800

248

India. Kutch. Khengarji III (1875-1942). 2 ½ Kori, 1934/VS 1991. In the name of George V. Y-52A. NGC MS 67. Est. 75-100

249

India. Kutch. Khengarji III (1875-1942). Pair of encapsulated 2 ½ Kori, 1934/VS 1990 and 1937/VS 1993. In the names of George V and George VI respectively. Y-52A, Y-74. Both NGC MS 65. (2) Est. 100-150

250

India. Kutch. Khengarji III (1875-1942). 2 ½ Kori, 1935/VS 1992. In the name of George V. Y-52A. NGC MS 66. Est. 75-100

251

India. Mysore. Dewan Purnaiya, regent for Krishna Wodeyar (1799-1810). Study group of 6 ¼ Cash. Mythical tiger, Sardula left. Cr.185. Generally Very Fine. (35) Est. 150-200

239 239

India. Tripura. Amara Manikya (1577-1586). Tanka, SE 1503. 10.73 gms. For the Conquest of the City of Sylhet. Lion left, rev. Sylhet legend naming Queen Amaravati. KM South Asia 92, R&B 173. Extremely Fine. Est. 150-200

240 240

India. Tripura. Rajadhara Manikya (1586-1599). Tanka, SE 1508. 10.73 gms. Lion left, rev. Legend naming Queen Satyavati. KM South Asia 97, R&B 187. Very light dirt deposits (likely removable), Extremely Fine. Est. 150-200

241 241

242

India. Tripura. Rama Manikya (1676-1681). Tanka, SE 1598. 10.45 gms. Lion left, rev. Legend naming Queen Ratnavati. KM South Asia 155, R&B 218. Rare. Some light reddish deposits and dark areas at edge, Extremely Fine. Est. 200-250 India. Tripura. Vira Vikrama Kishora (19231947). Rupee, TE 1337 (1930 AD). King’s bust l., rev. Tripura lion rampant l. with pike. KM 406, R&B 302. Obverse hairline, Extremely Fine-About Uncirculated. Est. 200-250

Page 27


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

256

252 252

253

India. Rewah. Gulab Singh (1918-1946). Silver Coronation Presentation Rupee, VS 1976 (1918). 11.40 gms. State Arms, rev. Two-line central legend, legend around. KM 31. Small remnant of shank on edge at 6:00 (typical as these pieces were used as award medals for a number of years after Gulab Singh’s Coronation). Minor reverse weakness of strike, lightly toned, AU-Uncirculated.\nA similar piece, with a bolder reverse, brought $1,500 in the last Stephen Album Rare Coins Auction, Number 15, Jan. 18-19, 2013, lot 1121. Est. 700-900 India. Travancore. Rama Varma VI-Balarama Varma II. Lot of 2 Chuckrams, nd (1906-28). RV monogram in central circle, rev. sankh (conch shell) in circle within wreath. KM 50. One or two with minor edge problems, Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (70) Est. 100-150

British India 254

256

British India. George V (1910-1936). Sovereign, 1918 I. Bombay. British types. Fr.1609, KM 525A. Toned a wheaten gold with pale rosé reverse hues. Uncirculated. Est. 375-425

257

British India. George V (1910-1936). Lot of Uncirculated Quarter Anna, 1912 (50). KM 512. A few dark or with slight spotting, Uncirculated. (50) Est. 350-450

258

British India. George V (1910-1936). Lot of Uncirculated Quarter Anna, 1928 (100). KM 512. Some with minor spotting, a few dark, Uncirculated. (100) Est. 200-300

259

British India. George V (1910-1936). Large group of Uncirculated Quarter Anna, 1933 (150). KM 512. Some with minor spotting, a few dark, Uncirculated. Est. 200-300

260

British India. George V (1910-1936). Lot of Uncirculated Quarter Anna, includes 1934 (70), 1933 (15) and 1927 (8). KM 512. Some with minor spotting, a few dark, Uncirculated. (93) Est. 125-175

British India. Pair of encapsulated Minors: E.I.C. Quarter Anna, 1858 (w). KM 463.1. NGC MS 64 RB; and Raj. Quarter Anna, 1889 (c). NGC MS 63 RB. Est. 100-150

Portuguese India

261

255 255

British India. Victoria, Empress (1876-1901). Half Rupee, 1862 (c). Calcutta. Bust C, type II reverse. NGC MS 64. Est. 200-300

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261

Portuguese India. Diu. João V (1706-1750). Rupia, 1749. Slanted “4” type. Crowned Arms, rev. Date in angles of ornamented cross. KM 24. Cleaned as is typical, Very Fine. Est. 200-250

262

Portuguese India. Diu. João V (1706-1750). Rupia, 1750. Crowned Arms, rev. Date in angles of ornamented cross. KM 24. Cleaned as is typical, Good Fine-Very Fine. Est. 175-225


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

263

Portuguese India. Luiz I (1861-1889). 3 Reis, 1871. Crowned Arms, rev. Value within wreath. KM 301. NGC MS 62 RB. Est. 150-200

Indian Exonumia 264

India. Tamilnadu. Lot of `Puveera’ Tokens, late 19th-early 20th Century. Brass, ca. 11-12mm. Multirayed star in linear and pellet circle, rev. Tamil “Pu”. Mitchiner 590-592. Many rather bright, Fine-Very Fine. (207) Est. 125-175

269 269

265

India. Republic. Indian Government Mint, Bombay. Group of Canteen Tokens. Ca. 1960’s. Brass. 5 Paisa (40 examples), 10 Paisa (50). + I.G.MINT +/BOMBAY, rev. CANTEEN TOKEN/(value). Mitchiner Indian MTP 766, 767. Fine-About Extremely Fine. (90) Est. 200-300

266

British India. George V (1910-1936). General Service Medal, one clasp: Burma 1930-32. Edge: 2737 RFM. SONZA NANG, 3-20 BURMA RIF. Typical contact marks, a bit bright, About Extremely Fine. Est. 90-120

267

Philippines. Philippines Numismatic And Antiquarian Society, in honor of the IMF-World Bank Meeting, Manila 1976. Medal. Gold (24K). 18 mm, 3.1 gms. IMF logo, rev. Society Arms with founding date (the Society is one of the world’s oldest numismatic clubs). Brilliant Prooflike. Est. 175-225

Ras al Khaima. Saqr b. Muhammad al-Qasimi (1948-2010). 75 Riyals, nd (1970). World Cup - Gianni Rivera. Bust of 1969 Ballon D’Or winner, Italian midfielder Gianni Rivera left, his team logo `AC Milan’ before. Fr.8, KM 11. 2,000 pieces minted. Brilliant Proof. Est. 700-800

270 270

Ras al Khaima. Saqr b. Muhammad al-Qasimi (1948-2010). 50 Riyals, nd (1970). World Cup -Gigi Riva. Head left of the Italian national football team’s all-time leading scorer Luigi Riva - Rombo di Tuono (“Roar of Thunder”), his team logo: `Cagliari’ before. Fr.9, KM 10. 2,000 pieces struck. Brilliant Proof. Est. 450-550

268 268

Ras al Khaima. Saqr b. Muhammad al-Qasimi (1948-2010). 100 Riyals, 1970. World Cup Football, Mexico 1970. View of the Jules Rimet Cup. Fr.7, KM 12. 2,000 pieces struck. Brilliant Proof. Est. 950-1050

271 271

Saudi Arabia. `Abd al-`Aziz b. Sa’ud (AH 13441373/1926-1953 AD). Guinea, AH 1370. Ruler’s name in circle, crossed swords and palms below, rev. Mintname and date within circle, value with palms below. Fr.1, KM 36. Lustrous Uncirculated. Est. 375-425

Page 29


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

272

South Korea. 50 Hwan lot, all KE 4294 (1961). Iron-clad turtle boat. KM 2 (235 pieces). All Uncirculated; also French Indo China. Federated States. Piastre, 1947 (36 pieces). Reeded edge. KM 32.2. Some with light dirt or stain, Extremely Fine-Uncirculated. (271) Est. 150-200

273

Thailand. Lannathai Kingdom. Trio of K’a K’im Silver Tamlung, “Broken Bracelet” Money, ca. 14th Century-1545. Two examples from Chiengmai and one from Chiengsen. Ca. 61-62 grams each. Very Fine. (3) Est. 200-250

274

Thailand. Lannathai Kingdom. Chiengmai. Quartet of K’a K’im Silver Tamlung, “Broken Bracelet” Money, ca. 14th Century-1545. Ca. 61 grams each. One with deposits, Fine-Very Fine; also two contemporary counterfeit K’a K’im. (6) Est. 250-300

275

Thailand. Lot of Pot Duang, “Bullet Money” Baht (12), ca. 1700’s-1800’s. Ca. 15 grams each. A few different marks. About Fine-Very Fine. (12) Est. 200-250

276

Thailand. Lot. Early Dravidian scyphate silver unit, likely Rare, toned Fine; “Bullet Money” Baht (2), Fine; Tin 1/8 Fuang (15), nd (1862), typical light dirt, About Very Good-Very Fine; low-grade Rama V 2 Att (10); ½ Satang, 1937 (96), Y.50, some with slight staining, generally Uncirculated; also 38mm lead Units (2) attributed in the past to the Khmer Kingdom of Angkor , but now shown to be gaming tokens from the Ayutthaya Period; floral lotus patterns, rough About Very Good and About Very Fine. (126) Est. 100-150

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277

Thailand. Rama V (1868-1910). Lot of Minors: 20 Satang, RS 116 (1897) H (9 examples). Elephant triptych. Y.27. Light dirt or staining in peripheries, Extremely Fine; ½ Pai (95) and ½ Att (98), 1874-1882. Y.18, 17. Some with minor dirt, many once cleaned as is common, Very Fine-Extremely Fine. (202) Est. 150-200

278

Tibet. Silver lot. 3 Srang, 16-10 (1936) - five examples, and 16-12 (1938); 1 ½ Srang, 16-10 and 16-11 (2). Y 26, Y 24. Extremely Fine-Choice About Uncirculated. (9) Est. 150-200

279

Tibet. Lot of larger AEs. 5 Sho (68), 1947-1952. Tibetan lion walking left before mountains. Mostly with light deposits, a few with problems, Fine-Very Fine; early 5 Skar (26), ca. 1915-1918. Tibetan lion, rev. Wheel in circle. Some cleaned, some with scratches or other problems, Very Good-Very Fine. (94) Est. 200-250

280

Tibet. Large group of AE Shos, ca. 1918-1930’s. Tibetan lion, legend around. A few different types. Light dirt, some with deposits, a few with problems, generally Fine-Very Fine. (Approximately 344) Est. 275-350

281

Tibet. Large group of AE Shos, ca. 1918-1937. Tibetan lion, legend around. A few different types. Light to moderate dirt (likely removable), some with heavier deposits, a few with problems, About Fine-Extremely Fine. (Approximately 391) Est. 300-400

282

Tibet. Lot of AE Minors: 5 Skar (103) - with a fair amount of 15-55 (1921) issues, and 7 ½ Skar (20), 1918-1922. Tibetan lion, legend around. A number of the 5 Skar cleaned as is common, the 7 ½ Skar with some deposits (likely removable), a few bent, generally Fine-Very Fine. (123) Est. 200-250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

UNITED STATES COINS Early U.S. Coins 283

284

1796 Castorland Restrikes. [2] Silver; Bronze. Both Uncirculated, the bronze example has some verdigris spots and the silver example is toned. Est. 50-75 1804 Draped Bust Half Cent Spiked Chin. Lte reverse die state with heavy rim cuds extending from 1:30 to 8:00. F-VF. Est. 100-150

288 288

1909-S. Indian Cent. ANACS MS62 RB “LAMINATION.” Housed in an early cache holder and retaining more than its fair share of faded mint color. The lower third of the obverse is toned. At first glance there appears to be a horizontal streak across the center of the Indian, but it is a planchet lamination. The reverse displays mottled toning. The key date to the Indian Cent series. Est. 600-900

289

1909-S Indian Cent. NGC VF 25 BN. A medium brown, evenly worn example. Est. 300-450

285

Eminently Collectible Chain Cent 285

1793. Chain Cent. Sheldon 4-c. On the obverse the outline of about half of Liberty’s head is visible, along with a suggestion of the date. “LIBERTY” is distinct. On the reverse the full chain and “ONE CENT” can be clearly observed, but there is an old scratch near the center. Portions of the rims are damaged, mostly on the obverse side. Fair. Sold as is, no returns. Est. 2500-3500

Flying Eagle, Indian and Lincoln Cents 286 287

1857 Flying Eagle. 1 Cent. NGC UNC DETAILS “IMPROPERLY CLEANED.” Est. 100-150 1857 Flying Eagle. 1 Cent. NGC AU 58. The devices enjoy a balanced overall strike and the fields retain just a hint of reflectivity. Est. 150-250

290 290

1909-S VDB Lincoln Cent. EF, dark, and there is some environmental damage. ANA certificate of authenticity. Est. 400-600

291

1976 Lincoln Cent. Error. Struck through a piece of fine mesh screen that affects about 20% of the obverse and a small portion of the reverse. R&B Unc. Some minor environmental damage on the reverse. Est. 50-75

292

Flying Eagle and Lincoln Cent Group. [38] 1857 Flying Eagle Good; 1909 Lincoln EF; 1909 VDB(21) mostly EF; 1910-S Fine; 1911-D(5) Good or so; 1912 EF; 1912-D(3) AG, Good(2); 1913-D(2) Good; 1915-S Good; 1916 EF; 1929 AU; Sold as is. Est. 150-250

Most single item lots can be viewed on our website www. spink.com, but not all multi-piece lots are imaged. Our specialist will gladly describe any multi-piece lot to you via Internet or telephone.

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

293

294

Flying Eagle and Indian Cents 1857 to 1909 in a Green Wayte Raymond Folder. [46] 1857 VG; 1858 Small F-VF lightly cleaned; 1864 Bronze Good dark; 1865 Good; 1868 Good; 1869 VG; 1870 GVG; 1871VG-F; 1872 Good; 1873 Good; 1874 Good; 1875 Fine; 1876 Fine; 1877 About Good; 1878 Fine; 1879VF; 1880 EF; 1881 EF; 1882 R & B Unc; 1883 EF; 1884 EF; 1885 AG: VF-EF; 1887EF; 1888AU; 1889VG; 1890 VF; 1891 Fine; 1892-1894 Good. 1895-1908 Ave. VG. 1889 is dark. No 1908S or 1909-S. Must be seen. Sold as is. Est. 300-450

Dimes 301

Bust Dime Trio. [3]. 1) 1820 Small 0. About Fine, but with some old scratches on the obverse. 2) 1825 VF or better detail, shallow scratches on the obverse. 3) 1832 VG. Est. 100-150

302

1825 Bust Dime. Choice VF, and revealing signs of gentle cleaning. Est. 60-90

Important Carson City Rarity

Lincoln Cents 1909 to 1948 in a Green Wayte Raymond Folder. [108] \nMissing 1909-S VDB; 1912-S; 1914-S; 1922 Plain and 1931-S. The early dates average VG-Fine. The 1909 VDB is a bright red Unc. The 1914-D lightly cleaned in spots. 1918 is R & B Unc. Must be seen. Sold as is. Est. 200-300

Nickels 295

Quartet of Shield and Liberty Nickels. [4] 1866 Rays Both EF toned. 1867 No Rays EF-AU. Heavy die crack near the top. 1883 NC AU toned. Est. 200-300

296

Liberty and Buffalo Nickel Assortment. [9] 1883 No Cents(4) VF-EF; 1886 Fair. Scarce; 1913 Type I Good; 1913-D TII VF. Scarce; 1919 VG, dark; 1925 Fine, dark. Est. 150-250

297

298

Buffalo Nickels 1913to 1938 in a Blue Whitman Album. [61] \n1913 TI Fine; 1913 TII EF, nick; 1913-S TI Good; 1913-D TI EF, light scratch; 1913D TII About Good, stained; 1914 Fine, dark; 1914S Good; 1915 EF detail, porous surfaces; 1915-S AG; 1915-D AG; 1916 VF; 1916-S Good detail; 1916-D AG; 1917 EF obverse; 1917-S AG: 1917-D Good, stains; 1918 EF obverse; 1918-S Fine, stains; 1918-D Good; 1919 VF; 1919-S Good stains; 1919-D AG; 1920 VF; 1920-S Good; 1920-D AG; 1921 VF, stains; 1923 VF; 1923-S AG; 1924 Fine; 1924-S AG; 1924-D VG; 1925 EF; 1925-S AG; 1925-D Good; 1926 VF; 1926-S VG, light scratch; 1926-D AG: 1927 VF; 1927-S Fine; 1927-D VG; 1928 F-VF; Most of the remaining coins are Fine to VF with a few better. Must be seen. Sold as is. Est. 175-250 A Large Buffalo Nickel Grouping. [270] Most of the dates seem to be in the teens and 1920s, many with strong four-digit dates. A sampling included 1913 TI VF; 1919 VF; 1921 VG; 1916 VF; 1916-S Good; 1931-S VF. Should be seen. Sold as is. Est. 300-500

299

Jefferson Nickel Group. [112]\nMostly 1930s, and most are mint marked. Average grade is VF. Includes many 1938 S & D and 1939 S & D examples. Est. 75-125

300

1858-O Half Dime. EF-AU.

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Est. 60-90

303 303

1877-CC Arrows. Seated Liberty Dime. NGC F15. A noteworthy example of this important Carson City Mint rarity. Evenly worn surfaces are bathed in a pleasant shade of medium grey. The strike is even and appealing, with LIBERTY boldly struck on the obverse shield. There are a few light interior marks, typical offor this state of preservation. Est. 3200-5000

304

Barber Dime Pair. 1) 1896-S Good. There is a tiny rim nick near the date, mentioned only for the sake of accuracy. 2) 1916-S. AU. Est. 75-125

305

Mercury Dime Quartet. [4] 1917 AU. 1921 About Good. 1921-D G-VG(2). Est. 120-180

306 306

1942/41. Mercury Dime. NGC AU DETAILS “IMPROPERLY CLEANED.” A subtle, deceptive cleaning is well hidden by an overlying shade of rosegrey toning. Scarce and popular. Est. 600-900


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Scarce Barber Quarter

307 307

308

309

310

1942/41-D. Mercury Dime. AU 53. In an NGC 1942-D holder. Silver-white surfaces retain plenty of mint frost. Very scarce, and missing from most specialized collections of this type. Est. 600-900 Mercury Dimes 1916 to 1945 in a Blue Whitman Album. [76] Complete with the exception of the 1916-D. 1916 AU 1916-S Fine; 1917 VF-EF; 1917S VF; 1918 EF, dark; 1918-S VF; 1918-D VF; 1919 Fine; 1921 About Good; 1921-D G-VG. The others are Good to AU for the most part. Sold as is. Est. 250-350 Mercury Dime Group. [14]Mixed dates in the 1930s and 1940s. Mostly BU Philadelphia examples. Est. 30-50 1875-S. Twenty Cent Piece. AU, or thereabouts, with noticeable evidence of a past cleaning. Est. 150-250

316 316

1913-S Barber Quarter. Good, obverse, Abt. Good reverse. The rim on the back is worn down into the tops of the letters in the mottos. Est. 600-900

317

1917 TI. Quarter. Choice AU details, perhaps lightlly cleaned. Est. 120-180

318

Standing Liberty Quarter Duo. [2] 1917 TI. Brilliant Uncirculated. Lightly and attractively toned; 1920 EF. Est. 150-250

319

1920. 25 Cents. Choice AU details, but lightly cleaned. Est. 50-75

320

Standing Liberty Quarters 1917 to 1930 in a Blue Whitman Album. [24] 1917 Type I VG, some dark toning; 1918 Good; 1918-S G-VG; 1918-D AG; 1919 AG; 1920 About Fine; 1920-S Good; 1923 Good. 1924 VF; 1925 VG-F; 1926 VF; 1926-S VG; 1926-D Good; 1927 Fine; 1927-S Good; 1927-D Good, toned; 1928 Fine; 1928-S VF; 1928-D VG; 1929 Fine; 1929-S Good; 1929-D VG: 1930 AU; 1930-S VG. Sold as is. Est. 100-150

321

Standing Liberty and Washington Quarter Assortment. [21] 1917 TI G-VG(4); 1920 VG; 1924 G; 1927-S AG-Good(3); Washington Quarters(12) 1930s, mostly EF-AU. Est. 100-150

322

1932-D & S Washington Quarter Selection. 1932D AG, dark; 1932-D G-VG(2); 1932-S Good, rim nick(2); 1932-S G-VG(3). [8] Est. 300-500

Quarters 311

1807 Draped Bust Quarter. Good.

312

1844-O Seated Liberty Quarter. EF or so. some moderate toning in spots, and some well hidden scratched near 8:00 on the obverse. Est. 50-75

313

Est. 250-400

Seated Liberty Quarter Trio. 1854 EF, lightly and attractively toned; 1861 EF, lightly toned; 1877 VF, toned. All with some evidence of a gentle cleaning in the past. Est. 100-150

314

1857 Seated Quarter. EF-AU. A handsome, moderately toned example. Est. 60-90

315

Liberty Seated & Barber Quarter Grouping. [5] 1876 Fine; 1893-O VF; 1897 Fine; 1903-O VF; 1908-O VF-EF. Est. 100-150

Half Dollars 323

1811 Bust Half Dollar. Extremely Fine. Olive-grey toning, a trifle deeper on the reverse. Est. 100-150

324

Quartet of Bust Half Dollars. [4] 1830 Small 0(2) VF, EF; 1830 Large 0 EF, heavy gauges at the center. 1833 VG. Est. 200-300

325

1853 Arrows + Rays Half Dollar XF-AU. Toned a pleasant lavendar-grey. Traces of underlying mint frost surround the protected area of the design. Est. 200-300

Page 33


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

326

1860-O Liberty Seated Half Dollar. EF, toned. Est. 60-90

327

Barber Half Dollar Assortment. 1893-O Good; 1895-O G-VG; 1896-O Good, spot; 1904 Fine; 1907-O Fine; 1912-D VF; 1913 VG, small scratch; 1914 Good. Est. 200-300

328

Walking Liberty Half Dollar Pairing. 1916 G-VG, reverse rim mark. 1921 G-VG. Light pin scratch well hidden in the recesses of the eagle’s feathers. Est. 75-125

329

Another Walking Liberty Half Dollar Pairing. 1916-D Obverse VG. 1917 AU. Est. 75-125

330

1921 Walking Liberty Half Dollar. PCGS XF45. This highly compelling key date offers bold definition and wonderfully wholesome surface quality . Very rarely encountered in this grade, and worthy of a premium bid. Est. 750-1250

331

Walking Liberty Half Dollars 1916 to 1936 in a Blue Whitman Album. Complete within this date range but for the 1917 and 1921. 1916 Fine; 1916-S Obv. Good; 1916-D Obv. VG; 1917-S Obv. VG; 1917-S Rev. About Fine; 1917-D Obv. VG; 1917-D Rev. Fine; 1918 VF; 1918-S VG; 1918-D VF; 1919 Fine; 1919-S VG; 1919-D VG; 1920 Fine; 1920-S VG; 1920-D Fine; 1921-S VG: 1921-D Good, rim nick; 1923-S Fine; 1927-S Fine; 1928-S Fine; 1929S Fine; 1929-D Fine; 1933-S Fine; 1934 AU; 1934-S Fine; 1934-D Fine; 1935 Fine; 1935-S VG: 1935-D Fine; 1936 EF; 1936-S VF; 1936-D Fin e Sold as is. Est. 500-750

332

Group of 1938-D Walking Liberty Half Dollars. [10] VG to VF. Two with rim nicks. Must be seen. Sold as is. Est. 400-600

333

Walking Liberty Half Dollar Assortment. [17] Mostly 1940s, AU to BU. A few have green toning from contact with album pages. Est. 150-250

Silver Dollars

334 334

1859-O Liberty Seated Dollar. EF, toned. An entirely honest example displaying better than average surface quality beneath lovely shades of medium grey toning. Est. 300-500

335 335

1870 Liberty Seated Dollar. A strong AU example that exhibits delicate russet toning and a full measure of subtle underlying muted mint frost. AU. Est. 400-600

336 336

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1872 Liberty Seated Dollar. AU or better with respect to wear, and very well struck on either side. There is a broad vertical band of deep toning with contrasting underlying russet-golden tones.. Est. 300-500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

344

337 337

1875-CC. Trade Dollar. NGC UNC DETAILS “IMPROPERLY CLEANED.” Pale golden toning lessens the noticeability of some light field lines on both sides. The strike is sharp, and plenty of mint frost is evident. Scarce. Est. 400-600

338

Trade Dollar Dollar Pairing. 1877-S VG, 1878-S VG; Both toned silvery gray. Est. 120-180

339

BU Morgan Dollar Quartette. [4] All BU.1878 7F reverse of ‘78; 1882-O with golden peripheral tones; 1883 with nice lavender toning; 1889-O. Est. 200-300

340

1878 7 Tailfeathers, Reverse of ‘79 Morgan Dollar. BU and offering claims to a Choice distinction. A considerable degree of prooflike luster is evident in the fields of this chisel-sharp specimen. Est. 75-125

344

1879. Morgan Dollar. Very Choice Brilliant Uncirculated, perhaps Gem. Rich satiny luster accented by a hint of subtle gold. Est. 100-200

Attractive 1879-CC Dollar

345 341

342

343

Five piece assortment of toned Mint State Morgan Dollars. 1) 1878 7 Tailfeathers, Reverse of ‘79. BU with claims to the Choice category. Lilac-grey centers are accented by olive-gold and subtle red iridescence. Scarce. 2) 1882 BU. Toned a rather deep olive-russetwith pleasant peripheral iridescence. 3) 1887 Choice BUand bathed in lavender-gold on either side. 4) 1900-O BU and nearly Choice. Varying shades of russet, gold, and electric-blue on either side. 5) 1900O Choice BU. Areas of golden toning at the peripheries. Est. 325-450

345

1879-CC Clear CC. Morgan $1. PCGS MS63 60% toned. Lightly frosted highly reflective surfaces are graced by peripheral toning on the obverse and attractive rainbow toning on the reverse. The minor scuff marks on Liberty’s face are not distracting, and this example might well achieve a higher grade upon reconsideration. Est. 4000-6000

346

1879-CC Morgan Dollar. Capped CC. PCGS XF45. Boldly struck and still retaining a fair share of mint luster. Scarce. Est. 250-350

A quartet of scarcer date Morgan Dollars. 1) 1878CC. A strong AU or better example and retaining essentially full mint frost. 2) 1888-S Choice AU and enjoying a Mint State “look” at first glance. 3) 1896S Easily Choice AU from the standpoint of wear. There is a faint hairline scratch in the right obverse field, and the coloration appears a bit questionable as to its origin. 4) 1898-S Choice AU or essentially so. Some prooflike surface in the fields on either side. [4] Est. 400-600

347

A Choice or better Mint State 1878-S Morgan Dollar threesome. All are fully struck Choice BU or better examples and display a varying degree of subtle toning. [3] Est. 200-300

1879-S Reverse of ‘79 Morgan Dollar. PCI MS65. Here is a wonderfully assertive example that enjoys wispy central violet toning framed by fiery golden iridescence on both the obverse and reverse. Est. 75-125

348

A five piece mostly Choice or better Mint State Morgan Dollar assortment. 1)1879-S Reverse of ‘79. Choice BU. Fully struck and exhibiting a smooth, satiny appearance. 2) 1880-S Very Choice BU or better. Warm silk-like luster immerses either side. 3) 1880-S Choice BU. Vibrant luster is accompanied by a hint of ever so subtle golden toning. 4) 1882-S BU with wisps of pale peripheral gold. 5) 1886 Very Choice BU. Prooflike and needle-sharp[5] Est. 300-500

Page 35


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

353

CA Morgan Dollar quartet including a Choice Mint State example from Carson City. 1) 1883 BU details however the obverse reveals some hairlines that certainly require mention. 2) 1883-CC Choice BU and bathed in luxuriant silken mint bloom. Scarce. 3)1885 Choice AU, bordering on the Mint State category. 4) 1897 Choice AU and virtually Mint State. [4] Est. 300-450

354

Choice Mint State 1883-CC Morgan Dollar pair. Here is a handsome Choice BU duo of this scarce date. Both are untoned and offer a rich complement of satiny mint bloom. [2] Est. 300-450

355

Two vibrant Mint State 1884-CC Morgan Dollars. Both are BU, and one is perhaps Choice. A blush of similar ever so subtle lilac toning accents both coins. [2] Est. 300-500

356

1884-S Morgan Dollar. About Uncirculated with respect to wear, however pale frosty-silver surfaces are indicative of a past ever so gentle cleaning. Still quite presentable and scarce nonetheless at this grade level. Est. 100-150

357

1885 Morgan Dollar. PCI MS64 DMPL. Frosty, needle-sharp design elements contrast nicely against premium quality, well mirrored fields. Est. 100-150

349 349

1880-CC Reverse of ‘79 Morgan Dollar. Brilliant Uncirculated. White and flashy with semi-reflective satiny surfaces on both sides. Est. 350-450

350 350

1881-CC. Morgan Dollar. Brilliant Uncirculated. Cartwheel mint bloom and an assertive strike characterize the vibrant surfaces of this coin. Est. 350-450

351

Five Choice BU or better Morgan Dollars. 1)1881S Choice BU. Well struck and fully lustrous. 2) 1883O Very Choice BU. Untoned, satiny and appealing. 3) 1884-O Choice BU. A balanced shade of pale russet is evident on either side. 4)1885 Very Choice BU and complemented by the slightest traces of gold and mauve. 5) 1885 Choice BU and enjoying cartwheel-satiny luster on both the obverse and reverse. [5] Est. 300-450

352

Seven piece BU or better Morgan Dollar Assemblage. 1)1882 BU or better. Icy mint frost. 2) 1884O Choice BU with claims to the Gem category. Rich golden toning. 3-4) 1886 BU or better and free of any particularly unsightly marks. 5) 1887 BU and nearly of Choice quality. A subtle hint of lilac on either side. 6) 1890 BU and frosty. 7) 1896 BU and approaching a Choice classification. Delicate russetgolden toning. [7] Est. 300-450

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358 358

1885-CC. Morgan Dollar. Very Choice Uncirculated. White and flashy highly reflective surfaces on the obverse. Deep mirror proof like on the reverse. Est. 600-900

359

An appealing pair of 1887-O Morgan Dollars. Choice BU despite a minor reverse rim mark at 3:00, and Choice AU, bordering on the Mint State category. The former exhibits a full complement of warm satiny luster beneath a hint of golden toning. The latter offers plenty of luster and reveals only trace of high point friction. [2] Est. 125-175


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

360

A Mint State twosome of scarce 1887-S Morgan Dollars. Both are BU or better and exhibit a more balanced appearance than the norm. Shades of lilac and gold on each example highlight underlying mint frost.[2] Est. 200-300

361

1888-S Morgan Dollar. BU and offering claims to a full Choice designation. Wonderful rolling-cartwheel mint bloom is augmented by chisel-sharp design features. The slightest trace of russet-mauve toning completes this scarce San Francisco mint example. Est. 300-500

362

Six Mint State 1889 Morgan Dollars. Each coin in this BU grouping is untoned and offers its share of frosty luster on both the obverse and reverse. [6] Est. 250-350

363

1889-CC Morgan Dollar. F-VF detail.Two deep rim bruises are evident on the obverse. A key date, very elusive in circulated grades. Est. 400-600

364

1889-CC. Morgan $1. Fine details, and the obverse is quite pleasing. The reverse rim is damaged near the bottom. The 1889-CC is a very difficult date to find in decent circulated grades, and it gets to be very expensive as the grades increase. Est. 300-450

365

1891 Morgan Dollar. BU and exhibiting some claims to the Choice category. The pale golden fields and devices of this above average example are free of any imperfections that require special mention. Est. 50-75

368 368

1893-S. Morgan $1. NGC XF 40. Pleasing natural silver-gray surfaces accented by hints of frost around the major design elements. The key to the entire series and always in demand. A lovely, problem-free example. Est. 7000-9000

369 369

1894. Morgan Dollar. PCGS VF35.The central definition is a bit soft, but the surfaces are original. Extremely scarce, and seldom encountered at any grade level. Est. 1000-1500

370

1894-O Morgan Dollar. PCGS EF45. Traces of luster still present. Est. 100-150

366 366

1891-CC. Morgan Dollar. PCGS MS62. Frosty surfaces beneath light lavender and gray toning. Great eye appeal. Est. 500-750

367

1892 Morgan Dollar. BU or a bit finer. There is a trace of subtle lilac toning over icy mint frost. The number of bagmarks encountered on this scarce Morgan issue, moreover, is certainly fewer th an the norm. Est. 250-350

Page 37


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

377

A Very Choice or better trio of Philadelphia Mint Morgan Dollars. 1) 1898 Very Choice BU. This untoned example offers smooth fields and devices that are further complemented by a warm, silk-like glow. 2) 1900 Gem BU Pale lilac-golden toning and outstanding surface quality characterize this specimen. 3)1903 Very Choice BU and enjoying wispy areas of gold and rose iridescence mainly at the peripheries. [3]. Est. 200-275

378

1899 Choice AU and just bordering on a full Mint State classification. Full frosty luster is accompanied by just the slightest trace of friction at the highest points of the design. Scarce and underrated at all grade levels. Est. 100-150

379

A Pleasing Octet of Mint State 1900 Morgan Dollars. Grades range from BU to Very Choice BU. All exhibit rich satiny luster and a bold strike. At least one example borders on a full Gem distincti on. [8] Est. 300-500

380

An Uncirculated 1900-O Morgan Dollar threesome. BU to Choice BU with each coin displaying an abundance of silk-like mint bloom beneath only subtle wisps of delicate toning. [3] Est. 120-180

381

A Handsome Quintet of Premium Quality Mint State 1900-O Morgan Dollars. Every coin falls within the Choice BU to Gem BU grade range. This hand-picked grouping enjoys rich satiny bloom and bold design features. [5] Est. 250-350

382

1900-S Morgan Dollar. BU and just bordering on a fully Choice designation. Traces of russet-mauve accent the peripheries. The design elements are assertively struck, and the fields offer a significant degree of shimmering semi-reflectivity. Scarce t his nice. Est. 200-300

371 371

372

373

1895-O. Morgan Dollar. PCGS AU58. A wonderfully fresh and wholesome near mint state example. The surfaces retain an essentially full compliment of icy mint frost highlighted with a blush of pale lilac toning. Quite scarce in this state of preservation. Est. 2500-3500 1895-O Morgan Dollar. AU with respect to wear, however closer scrutiny of the obverse reveals the presence of some hairlines from a past cleaning. The degree of definition remains quite bold, and the fields retain a measure of prooflike luster in the more protected areas. Quite scarce, with the typical survivor being much more heavily worn than the piece offered here. Est. 300-500 A Prooflike Philadelphia Mint Prooflike Morgan Dollar Trio. 1)1896 BU, nearly of Choice quality. The fields offer plenty of mirror-reflectivity on either side, and the surfaces are very nicely balanced. 2) 1897 BU and a deep mirror-prooflike specimen. A thin mark in the upper obverse field precludes a higher grade. Pale silver-white fields and devices are virtually free of any toning. 3)1898 BU with claims to the Choice category. Sharp design features and mirrorprooflike fields are accented by a delicate blush of golden toning. [3] Est. 250-350

374

1896-O Morgan Dollar. Easily a strong AU or better example. Delicate golden toning accentuates an essentially full complement of underlying frosty mint luster. Scarce at or above this condition level. Est. 100-150

375

1896-S Morgan Dollar. Easily EF and approaching AU with respect to wear. Est. 120-180

376

Silver Dollar Assortment. [6] 1897-S AU cleaned; 1922-D BU; 1922-S VF; 1923-S VF; 19 26-S VF, EF. Est. 100-150

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383 383

1901. Morgan Dollar. PCGS Genuine - Cleaning - AU details. Copious luster for a date that is almost always seen with dull, lifeless surfaces. Full mint state examples of this date are quite elusive, and this may be the closest you will get at a reasonable price. Est. 300-500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

393

A Group of 10 Assorted Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. 1879-S; Rev. of 79; 1880; 1880-S; 1881(2); 1881-S; 1882-S; 1883(2); 1887. All fully lustrous and white for the most part. [10] Est. 450-650

394

Four Third Party Graded Morgan Dollars. [1) 1879-S Reverse of ‘79 PCGS MS65. Cartwheel luster over razor-sharp surfaces. 2)1881-S NGC MS63. Assertive and delicately toned. 3) 1900-O NGC MS63. Toned a pale lilac over rich mint frost. 4) 1904-O ANACS MS64. Housed in a cache holder. Sharp, vibrant, and offering a shade of light lavender toning. [4] Est. 300-500

395

A BU Morgan Dollar Grouping. [14] All BU or close, some lightly cleaned or dipped. 1880; 1880-O; 1880-S(rim nick); 1881; 1882: 1884(2); 1887-O; 1890; 1891; 1896; 1996-O stain; 1897; 1900. Sold as is. Must be seen. Est. 400-600

396

A Morgan Dollar Assortment. [10] All EF to AU, some lightly cleaned or dipped. 1880; 1880-O; 1883S; 1884; 1889; 1890-O; 1896-O; 1897; 1900-S; 1904-O. Sold as is. Must be seen. Est. 300-500

397

Another Morgan Dollar Circulated Selection. [16] All EF to AU details, but may be cleaned or dipped. 1880-O; 1881; 1881-O(2); 1881-S; 1882; 1883; 1883-O; 1884; 1886-O; 1889(2); 1900; 1921-D(2); 1921-S polished. Est. 300-500

398

A Group of 12 Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. 1881(2); 1881-O; 1883-O; 1885-O(2); 1886(3); 1887; 1889. [12] Est. 500-750

399

1881-O Morgan Dollar Group. [17] All Almost Uncirculated. Est. 500-750

400

A Group of 10 Morgan Dollars in PCGS MS63 Holders. Several exhibit delicate toning. 1881-S; 1885(3); 1897; 1899-O; 1900(2); 1901-O; 1902-O. [10] Est. 450-650

401

Morgan Dollar Selection. [15] All EF to AU, some lightly cleaned or dipped. 1878 Weak 7/8F; 1880-O with toning issues; 1881; 1881-O; 1882-O/S; 1883S; 1884; 1889; 1889-O; 1890; 1894-O; 1896-O; 1897;1900; 1901-O. Sold as is. Must be seen. Est. 300-500

A Grouping of 10 New Orleans Mint Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders.\n1883-O(5); 1885-O(5). All but one are white or essentially white. [10] Est. 450-650

402

A Morgan Dollar Grouping. [15] All AU, some lightly cleaned or dipped. 1878-S; 1879-O; 1880-O; 1881; 1884; 1885; 1886; 1886-O; 1887; 1890-S; 1891; 1891-O; 1896; 1900; 1900-S. Sold as is. Must be seen. Est. 400-600

A Circulated Morgan Dollar Selection. [15] 1883S(3) EF to AU details, but cleaned, or with rim nicks; 1884-S(3) VF, EF, EF with rim nicks; 1885 EF toned; 1886-O(3) VF, EF, EF cleaned; 1891-O VF-EF; 1892-S VF; 1894-O VF; 1896-O AU, spot; 1896-S VF. Est. 250-350

403

Group of 12 Morgan Dollars in PCGS MS63 Holders.1884(2); 1885(2); 1885-O(5); 1899-O; 1900; 1900-O. All with rich satiny luster. A few lightly toned. 12] Est. 500-750

384

A trio of Nearly Choice or better 1901-O Morgan Dollars. All are either at or approaching a full Choice BU designation and display plenty of icy mint frost beneath a trace of delicate toning. [3] Est. 120-180

385

Pair of 1904 Morgan Dollars. Choice AU and BU. The first offers a blush of lavender-golden toning on either side. The second displays frosty luster beneath areas of pale mauve that is evident mostly at the peripheries. [2] Est. 120-180

386

1927 Peace Dollar. BU and revealing the usual degree of surface imperfections associated with the grade. The arm’s length appeal of this satiny, pale golden example is nonetheless quite satisfying. Est. 60-90

387

Morgan Dollar Circulated Selection. [20] \nAll EF to AU details, but may be cleaned or dipped. 1878 7/8 TF; 1878 7F Reverse of ‘79; 1878-S; 1879-O; 1880-O; 1883-S; 1884; 1884-S; 1885-S; 1886-O(2); 1887-S; 1891-S; 1894-O; 1896; 1896-O; 1900; 1901-O; 1904; 1904-S. Est. 300-500

388

389

390

391

392

Morgan Dollars in a Blue Whitman Folder 18781884. [26] 1878 7F Reverse of ‘78 AU; 1878 8TF AU; 1878-CC Ch. AU; 1878-S BU; 1879 Ch. AU; 1879-CC clear CC F-VF; 1879-O EF; 1879-S VF; 1880 Ch. BU, toned; 1880-CC Fine with minor rim nick; 1880-O VF; 1880-S VF; 1881 BU; 1881-CC FVF; 1881-O VF; 1881-S Fine; 1882 BU lightly toned; 1882-CC Fine; 1882-O AU; 1882-S EF; 1883 EFAU; 1883-CC VF; 1883-O AU; 1883-S EF-AU; 1884 AU; 1884-O AU. Est. 1000-1500 Nice Circulated Morgan Dollar Assortment. [13] \nAll EF to AU details, but may be cleaned or dipped.1878 7/8TF; 1878-S(2); 1879-S; 1880; 1884; 1886; 1886-O;1886-S; 1891-S(2); 1896; 1900. Est. 300-500 Another Morgan Dollar Selection. [15] All EF to AU, some lightly cleaned or dipped. 1878 7TF Reverse of ‘79; 1879; 1880-O; 1883-S; 1886; 1887; 1887-S; 1889; 1890; 1891-O; 1896-O; 1897-S; 1898; 1900; 1900-S. Sold as is. Must be seen. Est. 500-750

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

404

A 10-piece Grouping of 1884-O Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. All with icy mint frost andno more than a wisp of delicate toning. [10] Est. 450-650

405

Morgan Dollars in a Blue Whitman Folder 18841892. [25] 1884-S AU; 1885 AU; 1885-CC VF; 1885-O F-VF; 1885-S AU; 1886 AU; 1886-O; 1886S VF; 1887 EF; 1887-O AU; 1887-S AU; 1888 EF; 1888-O VF; 1889 AU; 1889-O EF; 1889-S VF; 1890 AU, tape remnant; 1890-CC VF; 1890-O AU; 1890S Fine; 1891 BU; 1891-CC F-VF; 1891-O EF; 1891S EF; 1892 AU. Est. 800-1200

406

A Group of 10 Philadelphia Mint Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders.1885(2); 1886(8). Most are essentially white. A few with light toning. [10] Est. 450-650

407

An Assortment of 10 New Orleans Mint Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. 1885-O; 1898O(4); 1900-O: 1902-O(2); 1904-O(2). All with similar essentially white coloration. [10] Est. 450-650

408

A Second Assortment of 10 New Orleans Mint Certified MS63 Morgan Dollars.In PCGS holders - 1885-O(2); 1899-O. In NGC holders - 1883-O; 1899-O; 1904-O(5). All display a warm and satiny glow, and no more than a subtle degree of toning. [10] Est. 450-650

409

410

411

414

Morgan & Peace Dollars in a Blue Whitman Folder 1900-1925. [25] 1900-S EF; 1901 EF; 1901-O EF; 1901-S VG-F; 1902 AU; 1902-O EF; 1902-S VF minor rim nicks; 1903 AU; 1903-S F-VF; 1904 EF; 1904-S EF; 1921 Morgan BU; 1921-D BU; 1921-S EF; 1921 Peace AU; 1922 BU; 1922-D EF; 1922-S EF; 1923 BU; 1923-D EF; 1923-S VF; 1924 BU; 1924-S VG, stain; 1925 Ch BU; 1925-S EF. Est. 750-1250

415

Morgan Dollar Selection. [12] 1921(6); 1921-D(3); 1921-S(3). All Brilliant Uncirculated.Est. 350-450

416

1921 P-D-S Morgan Dollar Grouping. [15] All EF to AU. Est. 400-600

417

Another Group of 1921 P-D-S Morgan Dollars. [16] All EF to AU. Est. 400-600

418

A Group of 20 Peace Dollars in NGC MS64 Holders. 1922(4); 1923(16). Most are pure white. A few with light toning.[20] Est. 1000-1500

419

Peace Dollars in a Blue Whitman Folder 19261935. [13] \n1926 EF; 1926-D EF; 1926-S AU; 1927 EF; 1927-D EF-AU; 1927-S VF; 1928 Ch AU; 1928-S VF; 1934 AU; 1934-D Ch AU; 1934-S VF; 1935 EF; 1935-S EF. Est. 500-750

420

Morgan and Peace Dollar Assortment. [15] Ten Morgan Dollars, five Peace Dollars. One or two culls, two or three Uncirculated examples, and the rest average EF or so. Must be seen. Sold as is.Est. 400-600

A Grouping of 10 Philadelphia Mint Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. 1887; 1889(4); 1896(5). Most are essentially white, however one of the 1896 examples is attractively toned. [10] Est. 450-650 A Second Group of 10 Morgan Dollars in Older Generation PCGS MS63 Holders. 1889(3); 1899O; 1900; 1900-O;1901-O(3); 1904-O. [10] All enjoy rich satiny luster accented by hints of delicate toning. Est. 450-650 A Group of 10 1890 Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. Each exhibits pale lilac and /or russet toning over rich satiny luster. [10] Est. 450-650

412

A Further Group of 11 Morgan Dollars in NGC MS63 Holders. 1890(6); 1898-O; 1900-O; 1902O; 1904-O(2). All are either white or exhibit some degree of delicate toning. [11] Est. 400-600

413

Morgan Dollars in a Blue Whitman Folder 18921900. [22] \n1892-O EF-AU; 1892-S EF, light rim bruise; 1893 VF; 1893-CC VG; 1893-O EF-AU, nick; 1894-O AU; 1894-S VG; 1895-S VG; 1896 EF; 1896-O Ch. AU; 1896-S EF; 1897 VF; 1897-O Ch. AU; 1897-S VF; 1898 AU; 1898-O VF; 1898-S VF; 1899 AU; 1899-O VF; 1899-S Fine, minor rim nicks; 1900 Ch. AU; 1900-O Ch. AU. Est. 1500-2500

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U.S. GOLD COINS Gold Dollars 421

1849 Open Wreath Gold Dollar Type I. NGC UNC DETAILS “OBV SCRATCHED.”Sharp, and quite frosty. Some light contact marks and hairline scratches are present, but not distracting. Est. 300-450

422

1852 Gold Dollar. Easily EF or better in terms of wear. A few small, old marks are noted on this deep yellow-golden example. Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Rare Charlotte Type II Dollar

423 423

1853 Gold Dollar Type I. NGC MS64. Nearly Gem, but one lone contact mark in the obverse field near Liberty’s chin may have influenced the final grade designated. Est. 1000-1500

427 427

1855-C Gold DollarType II. PCGS AU50. Traces of original mint luster are still present. A scarce and popular date as it is the only Type II “C” mint in the entire series. 9,803 pieces were struck , many from clashed dies, and the present example is no exception. The “8” in the date is characteristically weak. Est. 5000-6000

424 424

1854 Gold Dollar Type I Dollar. Choice BU and exhibiting an entirely assertive strike. Delicate orangegolden surfaces are embellished by warm, satiny mint bloom. Est. 600-700

428 428

425 425

1856 Slant 5 Gold Dollar. Choice EF, nearly AU. Offering excellent arm’s length appeal and its fair share of mint frost, this coin would fit quite nicely into a circulated gold type set. Est. 175-200

1854 Gold Dollar Type II. Almost Uncirculated. Sharply struck, with lovely lemon yellow surfaces and traces of original mint luster. Est. 500-750

429 429 426 426

1855 Gold Dollar Type II. EF-AU. There is a pin scratch extending from the neck to the rim, visible only when the coin is rotated. and not too distracting. Est. 250-350

1858 Gold Dollar Type III. PCGS MS64. CAC. Premium quality for the grade. Coruscating luster abounds on this satiny golden, boldly struck $1 gold piece. Est. 750-1250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

$2.5 Gold Gem 1834 Classic $2.5

430 430

1834 $2.50 Classic. Breen 6140. Large Head. NGC MS65. Vibrant golden yellow with surfaces that are highly reflective in the obverse fields, and frosty in the central design elements. This is a very attractive example of the first year of issue for this distinctive “No Motto” type. By 1834 the price of gold had risen to a point where the bullion value contained in US gold coins was more than the face value. This motivated gold dealers to acquire vast quantities of US gold coins and as a consequence, most of the early mintages disappeared from circulation. In order to provide gold coins that would actually circulate Congress passed the Act of June 28th, 1834 which contained provisions lowering the amount of gold contained in the $2.50 pieces of that year. To clearly differentiate the new coins from the old ones a significant design change was made - the Latin motto on the reverse was completely eliminated. Small Head and Large Head varieties exist. The Large Head can easily be distinguished by the indentation in the two curls near the back of Liberty’s head. The major grading services report only two 1834 $2.50 gold pieces in higher grades, both just one point higher than the current example. The last time a comparable piece appeared in auction was back in August of 2010. You may have to wait years to acquire a better example. Est. 20000-30000

433

431 431

1836 Script 8. $2.5 Classic Head. PCGS XF 40.The yellow golden surfaces retain much of the original mint frost within the peripheral devices. Est. 700-900

433

1851-O $2.5 Liberty. AU or very nearly so. Here is a subtle greenish-golden example that still retains plenty of mint frost on either side. This uncommon New Orleans issue certainly deserves a substantial premium above type coin prices for this design. Est. 350-450

432 432

1839-C $2.5 Classic. PCGS VF Details - EX Jewelry. A very scarce and highly collectible Charlotte Mint issue. Est. 750-1250

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434 434

1857. $2.5 Liberty. NGC 61. Frosty mint luster and bold central details characterize this earlier date Liberty Head Quarter Eagle. Est. 450-650


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

435 435

1859 $2.5 Liberty Type II, “New Reverse.” Choice Almost Uncirculated. Sharply struck, with lovely lemon yellow surfaces and traces of original mint luster. Est. 250-350

439 439

1902 $2.5 Liberty. BU with claims to the Choice category. There is a single short hairline just above the eagle on the reverse, otherwise this sharp, delicate orange-golden specimen would garner consideration for an even higher grade. Est. 375-425

436 436

1861 $2.5 Liberty. “New Reverse.” Golden Yellow. Very sharply struck. Choice Almost Uncirculated. This popular Civil War date is very much in demand. Est. 300-500

440 440

1903 $2.5 Liberty. NGC MS65. Brilliant golden yellow, with profusely frosted satiny surfaces. Sharply struck. A true Gem in every way, and it is hard to imagine a nicer example. Est. 1250-1500

437 437

1865-S $2.5 Liberty. EF-AU. The strike is a bit soft in the central portion of the reverse, but there are traces of original mint luster and very clear pleasing pale gold surfaces throughout. A scarce and popular issue. Est. 750-1250

441 441

1903 $2.5 Liberty. NGC MS64. A sharply struck lemon yellow example with attractive hints of pink throughout. Pleasing lightly frosted surfaces and brilliant coruscating luster create wonderful eye appeal. No readily apparent contact marks are visible on this wholesome near-Gem. Est. 750-1250

438 438

1875-S $2.5 Liberty. Almost Uncirculated in terms of wear. Light hairlines are evident under close scrutiny in the obverse fields. Champagne golden surfaces and an exemplary strike for this issue that often lacks central detail even on mint state examples. Est. 500-750

442 442

1904 $2.5 Liberty. PCGS MS65. Golden yellow with light hints of orange. Lovely frosted satin surfaces. A sharply struck example that will perhaps make a good candidate for a “plus” designation. Est. 1250-1500

Page 43


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

447 443 447 443

1905 $2.5 Liberty. BU and nearly warranting a Choice designation. Fully struck design features are awash in unbroken satiny mint bloom. This example is certainly worthy of a premium as compared to the typical mint state survivor of this issue. Est. 375-425

1907 $2.5 Liberty. NGC MS63 CAC. Lovely brilliant yellow luster adds strong eye appeal to this premium quality piece minted in the last year this type was issued. Est. 600-900

448 448 444 444

1905 $2.5 Liberty. PCGS MS65. Attractive frosted satin orange-yellow surfaces grace this pretty example. Est. 1250-1500

1908 $2.5 Indian. Brilliant Uncirculated, perhaps Choice. Full mint luster, minimal contact marks, and a strike that is above average for this first-year-of-issue. Est. 500-750

449 449 445 445

1906 $2.5 Liberty. BU. Satiny luster and a balanced strike characterize this rich yellow-golden specimen. Est. 300-350

1908 $2.5 Indian. A solid AU or better specimen. This wholly original coin enjoys smooth surface quality accompanied by plenty of retained mint frost in the devices. Est. 250-300

450 446 446

1907 $2.5 Liberty. Brilliant Uncirculated, perhaps Choice. Abundant satin mint luster on brilliant golden yellow surfaces throughout. The strike is razor sharp. Est. 400-600

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450

1909 $2.5 Indian. NGC MS63. A difficult coin to locate in true Choice Uncirculated grades. Please note that the case has a hairline scratch, but the coin has no significant contact marks. Est. 1000-1500

451

1909 $2.5 Indian. Almost Uncirculated.The frosty design elements contrast nicely with the yellow-golden surfaces. Est. 275-350


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

457

452 452

1913 $2.5 Indian. BU with claims to a Choice distinction. Here is a frosty, rich yellow-golden example that offers premium surface quality on either side. Est. 400-450

457

453 453

1913 $2.5 Indian. Choice AU and just bordering on the Mint Sate category. A minor obverse mark is visible just inside the rim at 11:30, otherwise this well struck, rich yellow-golden specimen is entirely appealing. Est. 275-325

454

1915 $2.5 Indian. Uncirculated.Sharply struck, with wonderfully honest and original surfaces. Est. 300-500

1927 $2.5 Indian. BU and nearly of Choice quality. Here is a nicely balanced, premium example that is entirely free of any unsightly marks at the most conspicuous locations. Est. 400-450

458 458

1928 $2.5 Indian. PCGS MS64. Deep golden orange, with a light blush of white toning that occupies the central portions of the obverse. Est. 750-1250

459 459 455 455

1928 $2.5 Indian. BU. There is a full complement of mint frost that augments evenly struck devices on either side. Est. 275-350

1926 $2.5 Indian. Choice AU. Frosty and defectfree were it not for a single very well hidden obverse hairline scratch at the lower right headdress that is only visible under close scrutiny with a glass. Est. 275-300 460 460

456 456

1928 $2.5 Indian. A strong AU or better . Wonderfully bold definition and plenty of mint frost distinguish this ever so gently worn example. Est. 275-300

1926 $2.5 Indian. A frosty and highly attractive AU example. With only light friction at the most vulnerable locations, this appealing coin easily warrants the assigned grade. Est. 250-275

Page 45


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

465

461 461

1854 $3. Almost Uncirculated.Frosty mint luster is accompanied by subtle traces of copper toning in the devices. Est. 1000-1500

465

1878 $3. NGC MS64. A solidly struck example of this always popular odd-denomination. Pleasing lightly frosted surfaces prevail throughout. There are no readily apparent contact marks. Conservatively graded. Est. 5000-7500

462 462

1855 $3. VF or essentially so. Were it not for a single trivial reverse rim mark at 4:00, this evenly worn coin would be free of any notable imperfections. Scarce, affordable, and quite presentable. Est. 500-600

466 466

1888 $3. The obverse is bright and lustrous, but there are scratches in the central portions of the reverse. PCGS AU Details - Damage. A perfect coin for an exhibit or type set that displays obverse and reverse side by side. Est. 1500-2500

$5 Gold Razor Sharp 1800 Half Eagle

463 463

1856. $3. NGC VG 8. Full rims, bold peripheral legends, and a partial LIBERTY add to the eye appeal of this pale yellow-golden example. A scarce, low mintage San Francisco issue. Est. 600-750 467 467

464 464

1878 $3. PCGS MS63. Beautiful light golden frosted surfaces prevail throughout this sharply struck example. Est. 5000-7000

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1800 Half Eagle. BD-2, with a blunt 1 in the date and the upright of E in STATES positioned to the left of a cloud space. Golden orange toning accentuates the mottos and central devices on both sides. The field surfaces are highly reflective. PCGS AU 55. A very appealing example with a razor sharp strike and a good deal of luster still present. Est. 5000-7000


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Lovely Overdate Heraldic Half Eagle

472 472 468 468

469

1803, 3 Over 2 Half Eagle. BD-4, readily identified by the recut “T” in “UNITED.” \nHoney golden hues and flashes of original satin mint luster give this example exceptional eye appeal for the grade. No adjustment marks, and the rims are problem-free. One small pin scratch on the reverse near the left side of the shield is mentioned only for the sake of accuracy. PCGS AU53. Heraldic eagle, with arrows in the eagle’s right claw (viewer’s left). This was an error on the part of Robert Scott. The heraldic significance of the arrows in the eagle’s right claw implied a warlike attitude that some European observers interpreted as a veiled threat. The blunder was soon corrected by moving the olive branch to the eagle’s right claw. Est. 6000-9000 1882-S $5 Liberty. VF, polished.

1907 $5 Liberty. PCGS MS63. CAC. Premium quality for the grade, with thick, rich, frosty luster, and a sharp strike. Est. 500-750

473 473

1907 $5 Liberty. Bright yellow with satiny surfaces graced with abundant mint luster. PCGS MS63. Est. 600-900

Est. 300-500

474 474 470 470

1894-O $5 Liberty. PCGS MS61. Light honey gold. Brilliant reflective surfaces with abundant mint luster. The strike is exceptional for this New Orleans issue, elusive in Mint State. Est. 1200-1800

1907-D $5 Liberty. PCGS MS64. Golden yellow with light hints of pink and orange. Lightly frosted satiny surfaces. Sharply struck and a strong candidate for an upgrade. Est. 1000-1500

475 475 471 471

1905 $5 Liberty. Golden yellow with satin surfaces that radiate luster as the coin is tilted. The strike is bold. PCGS MS64. Est. 600-900

1907-D $5 Liberty. Choice BU and a wonderfully “fresh” example. Rich yellow-golden fields and devices are immersed in luxuriant silken mint bloom. Quite handsome for the grade a certain to please all but the most finicky of collectors. Est. 500-600

Page 47


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Very Choice 1913 $5 Indian $10 Gold 476 476

1909 $5 Indian. NGC MS63. Copious orange-gold luster is present everywhere. A strictly original example with great eye appeal. Housed in an earlier “fat” NGC holder. Est. 1000-1500 481 481

1913 $5 Indian. PCGS MS64. Lemon yellow with light hints of pink and orange. Fresh and frosty satin surfaces throughout. Housed in a blue-label PCGS holder, conservatively graded nearly a decade ago. Est. 2500-3500

477 477

1909 $5 Indian. Choice AU. Light wear accompanies mint frost on both the obverse and reverse. Pleasant surfaces are free of any defects that warrant special mention. Est. 400-450

482 482

1913 $5 Indian. Choice AU or better. This frosty, entirely wholesome specimen still retains its original “dirt” within some of the recessed areas of the design. Est. 425-475

483

1880. $10 Liberty. EF details, lightly polished. Est. 750-1250

478 478

1909-D $5 Indian. Br.6810. Solid D. Deep golden yellow with subtle hints of pink and orange. Brilliant Uncirculated, perhaps Choice. Est. 750-1250

479 479

480

1910 $5 Indian. Choice AU and a whisper away from a full Mint State distinction. Honest and unmolested, the surfaces of this coin are entirely satisfying. Est. 425-475 1911 $5 Indian. Almost Uncirculated. A tiny rim nick is noted on the reverse at the 9:00 position. Est. 500-750

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484 484

1881 $10 Liberty. Extremely Fine, perhaps better. Sharp and well balanced. Est. 750-1250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

488

1901 $10 Liberty. BU and exhibiting some characteristics indicative of a Choice designation. The fields and design features have sustained fewer marks than typically encountered. Likewise, the strike of this frosty example adds to its appeal. Est. 775-975

485 485

1894 $10 Liberty. BU with claims to the Choice category. A sharp strike and semi-reflective fields give this example visual allure that is clearly finer than the norm. Est. 800-1000 489 489

1906-O $10 Liberty. AU. Here is a wholly original New Orleans Mint example that retains its fair share of mint frost on both the obverse and reverse. Quite scarce in all grades, and enjoying a mintage of only 86,895 pieces. Est. 850-1000

486 486

1898 $10 Liberty. BU and virtually of full Choice quality. Here is a satiny, orange-golden specimen that enjoys both an assertive strike and well balanced surfaces that are pleasing to the eye. Est. 800-1000

490 490

487 487

1907 $10 Liberty. Golden yellow with satiny surfaces frosted with mint luster. Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 750-1250

Very Choice 1907 No Periods Indian

1899 $10 Liberty. NGC MS64. A sharply struck lemon yellow example with pleasing lightly frosted surfaces and softly shimmering luster throughout. A thiny light mark can be seen beneath Liberty’s chin upon close inspection, but is hardly distracting. Est. 1250-1500

491 491

488

1907 $10 Indian No Periods. NGC MS64. CAC. Premium quality for the grade, with glittering, corruscating, lemon-yellow satin surfaces. The central fields and devices are free of any distracting contact marks. A beautiful example from the first year this type was issued. Est. 3000-5000

Page 49


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

495

492 492

1909 $10 Indian. PCGS MS63. Abundant orangegold luster is omnipresent. Housed in an older generation blue-label PCGS holder, and graded over a decade ago. Certainly a strong candidate for an upgrade, and the value nearly doubles in MS64. Est. 2500-3500

495

1913-S $10 Indian. A solid AU specimen with claims to a higher grade. This very scarce Indian Head Eagle enjoys only light wear and nicely balanced surfaces. Here is an opportunity to acquire a very presentable example of this low mintage issue (a mere 66,000 pieces were coined) at an “affordable” price. Est. 1000-1250

493 493

1911 $10 Indian. NGC MS64. Golden yellow with hints of pink and dusty brown toning. Est. 2000-3000

496 496

1932 $10 Indian. NGC MS64. Golden yellow with traces of pink and orange. Est. 1250-1750

494 494

1911 $10 Indian. Pale yellow gold with subtle hints of orange toning. The strike is just average, but there are no significant contact marks to be found. Choice Almost Uncirculated. Est. 800-1200 497 497

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1932 $10 Indian. Bright yellow gold with subtle hints of pale green toning near the date. A few scattered contact marks can be seen on close inspection, but the overall look of this example is quite pleasing. Brilliant Uncirculated, close to Choice. Est. 900-1200


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

$20 Gold Gem Double Eagle From the S.S. Central America

498 498

1857-S $20 Liberty. S.S. Central America 20A Spiked Shield PCGS MS65. Golden yellow with satiny surfaces. This shipwreck survivor is as fresh and bright as the day it was minted. Housed in the magnificent presentation box and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity, and a research pamphlet. Some minor carbon spots are mentioned simply for the sake of accuracy, but this is truly a superb example of the high level of workmanship at the San Francisco Mint during this exciting period of American history. Est. 10000-15000

Page 51


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Scarce 1866-S With Motto Double Eagle

502 502 499 499

1866-S With Motto. $20 Liberty. NGC XF 45.Hints of rose toning augment the appearance of the fiellds and devices which retain quite a bit of subtle mint frost. The surface quality is well above average for this grade. Est. 2000-3000

1901 $20 Liberty. PCGS MS65. CAC. Premium quality for the grade. Abundant frosty luster graces the surfaces of this mellow-yellow Double Eagle. Est. 3500-4250

503 503 500 500

1896-S $20 Liberty. Golden orange with hints of pink. The reverse is quite Choice. Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 1500-1750

1903-S $20 Liberty. Pale yellow gold. Softly reflective surfaces. There is a significant dig in the field behind Liberty’s neck. Strong Almost Uncirculated.There are signs of a gentle cleaning. Est. 1500-1750

504 501 501

1900 $20 Liberty. Bright golden yellow with an abundance of frosty mint luster. There is a copper spot in front of Liberty’s nose, and a few more on the coin’s edge. Some minor contact marks and a trivial rim nicks are also present. Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 1500-1750

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504

1904 $20 Liberty. NGC MS64. Thick, rich, frosty corruscating luster enhances the appearance of this solidly struck near-Gem example. Est. 1750-1800


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

508

505 505

1907 $20 St. Gaudens. Arabic Numerals. PCGS MS64. Above average luster adds strong eye appeal to this lovely example from the first year this type was issued. Est. 1750-2250

508

1908 $20 St. Gaudens No Motto. PCGS MS64. Abundant frosty yellow luster beneath wispy coppery toning. Est. 1700-1900

509 506 506

509

1908 $20 St. Gaudens. No Motto. Above average strike and luster, but there are several contact marks on the obverse rim. Choice Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 1800-2200

1908 $20 St. Gaudens No Motto. PCGS MS64. The frosty golden yellow surfaces are quite pleasing. Est. 1700-1900

510 507 507

1908 $20 St. Gaudens No Motto. PCGS MS64. Superior light orange gold luster throughout, and the strike is well above average for this date and type. Conservatively graded. Est. 1700-1900

510

1909 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS63. Elusive date in true Choice Uncirculated, and should be worth a premium bid. Est. 2000-2500

Page 53


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

514

511 511

1923 $20 St. Gaudens. Brilliant Uncirculated, perhaps Choice. Minor obverse streaking. Est. 1500-1700

514

515

512 512

1923-D $20 St. Gaudens. Brilliant Uncirculated, with numerous contact marks on the obverse. Est. 1500-1700

515

513 513

1924 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Satiny golden orange luster with a blush of central rose toning compliments this beautiful example. Est. 1700-1900

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1924 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Another satiny golden, sharply struck beauty with deep yellow fields and devices. Est. 1700-1900

1924 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Perhaps a candidate for a “plus” designation or more. Shimmering frosty mint luster bathes both sides. Est. 1700-1900

516 516

1927 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Delicate rose toning and very pleasing clear satin surfaces characterize this lovely $20 St. Gaudens. Est. 1700-1900


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

517 517

1927 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Boldly struck, and the luster is superior to most Gems we’ve seen. Est. 1700-1900

518 518

1927 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Satiny golden orange luster with a hint of coppery-rose toning can be found throughout. Est. 1700-1900

519 519

1927 $20 St. Gaudens. PCGS MS64. Boldly struck, copious luster, perhaps one contact mark away from a higher designation. Est. 1700-1900

Silver Commemoratives 520

1893 Isabella Quarter. EF, or better in terms of wear, but rather noticeably cleaned on both sides. Est. 150-250

521 521

1939 Arkansas Half Dollar PDS Set. AU.Silvery surfaces retaining most of the original mint frost. Est. 400-600

522

1915-S Panama-Pacific Exposition Half Dollar. AU detail, pale from a past cleaning. Est. 150-250

523

Silver Commemorative Half Dollar Selection. [7] 1892 Columbian Exposition; 1893 Columbian Exposition; 1925 Lexington; 1923-S Monroe; 1935-S San Diego; 1925 Stone Mountain; 1934 Texas. All with AU to Uncirculated details, but some environmental damage. Est. 250-350

524

Quartet of Commemorative Half Dollars. [4] 1893 Columbian Exposition(2), both EF toned; 1952 Washington Carver(2), both BU toned. Est. 40-60

525

Silver Commemorative Half Dollar Assortment in a Blue Whitman Album. [30] Columbian Exposition Half Dollars(11) several VG-Fine, but a few are AU; 1922 Grant BU; 1926 Philadelphia Sesqui(2) AU, toned; 1927 Vermont AU toned; 1936 Long Island(3) EF, BU toned(2); 1946 Booker T. Washington(6) AU to BU; 1952 and 1954-S Washington Carver BU. Sold as is. Est. 500-750

Page 55


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

529

526 526

529

1926 $2 1/2 Philadelphia Sesquicentennial. PCGS Unc. Details. Alterered Surfaces. Est. 500-750

530

Numismatic Potpouri. [23] -6) 1865 3 Cent Pieces. Culls(2), VG, VF-EF(3). 7-13) Shield Nickels. 1866 Rays VG stains, 1867 No Rays AG, VG(2), Fine. 1869 VG dark. 1872 AG. 14) 1883 NC Liberty Nickel cull. 15-19) Liberty Seated Half Dimes 1859 F-VF, 1872 VG. Dimes 1853 Arrows VF, 1887-S Fine, nick. 18) Quarter 1875 VF. 20) 1834 Bust Half. VG detail, but rim damage and graffiti. 21-22) Liberty Seated Half Dollars 1855-O Arrows EF Cleaned, 1856-O EF detail, rim damage. 23) 1952 Washington Carver Half Dollar. BU. Est. 250-350

531

Another Numismatic Potpouri. [14] 1-3) Large Cents - Culls(3). VG, VF-EF(3). 4-5) Liberty Seated Half Dimes 1857 EF, clipped, toned. 1871 Fine, dark. 6-7) Dimes 1842 Fine, dark; 1859-O Good. 8-9) Quarters 1854 Arrows AG; 1855 Arrows Fair. 10-13) Half Dollars - 1843 Good; 1859 Good, “P” punched at center; 1877 EF detail, rim damage; 1916 Walking Liberty VG, numerous small digs. 14) 1878-CC Morgan Dollar Fine, dark stains and rim damage. Est. 200-300

532

Numismatic Assortment. [18] 1-3) Large Cents 1846 Fine, dark; 1850 VG, cleaned; 1851 VF, nicks. 4) 1857 Flying Eagle F-VF. 5-8) Indian Cents - 1859 Good; 1863 VG, dark; culls(2). 9) 1865 Two Cent About Fine. 10-13) Three Cent Nickels - 1865 Fine; 1866 VF; culls(2); 14-16) Nickels -Liberty culls(2); 1930-S VG. 17) California gold token. 18) Bronze Souvenir of Pilgrimage medal, St. John’s. NY. EF. m 1868Two with rim nicks. Must be seen. Sold as is. Est. 100-150

533

1953 & 1954 Proof Sets. [2] Mounted in a brown Wayte Raymond album page. The cents and nickels are bright red and spot free. The silver coins have attractive toning. Est. 250-350

534

1955 Proof Set in the Original Box. Some toning on the silver coins, but attractive. Est. 60-90

1900. Lafayette $1. NGC AU DETAILS “IMPROPERLY CLEANED.”The surfaces have been burnished and there is a short hairline scratch just below Washington’s jaw. Est. 200-300

Commemorative Gold Exceptional 1903 McKinley $1 Commemorative

527 527

1903 $1 Louisiana Purchase Exposition. William McKinley. Exceptional luster and strike. PCGS MS63. Est. 600-900

528 528

1915-S $1 Panama-Pacific Exposition. Choice Brilliant Uncirculated. Est. 1000-1500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Impressive Territorial Gold

535 535

1861 $5 Clark Gruber & Company, Denver. “PIKES PEAK” on Liberty’s coronet. PCGS AU50. Sharply struck near the outer portions, typically weak central devices. In the early days of the California gold rush, gold dust and gold nuggets were the only real medium of exchange available. This proved to be cumbersome way of doing business. In the eastern states gold dust and nuggets could be minted into much more convenient to use gold coins. For Californians, who had no U.S. Mint, the process of shipping gold dust and nuggets east to be converted into coins could take up to three months. Private mints soon stepped in to fill this void, and the same thing happened in the Territory of Jefferson (renamed Colorado after 1861). In 1860, Austin Clark, Milton Clark, and Emanuel Gruber obtained minting equipment in Philadelphia and New York and had it shipped to Denver City where they set up an “Assay and Coinage Office.” The coins they produced were well received, as they contained 1% more gold than standard U.S. Mint products. As in San Francisco, where the U.S. Mint eventually replaced the private mints, the same thing happened in Denver. Est. 3000-5000

536

Civil War Tokens. [7]. AG, Fine(2), EF(4). Kitteredge & Co. (Military goods), D. L. Wing, and four patriotic themes. Est. 80-120

537

Alaska 1910 Token. 2 Too Wah. AU, and toned a pleasing orange-yellow golden color. Est. 50-75

538 538

1837. Feuchtwanger Composition Cent. NY HT268(5G). NGC TOKEN MS 64. A very attractive example with abundant luster and pink violet toning. Est. 400-600

539

New Jersey State Agricultural Society. Award Medal, 1883. Silver, 57.5mm, 63.2 gms. By Henning & Eymann. Lady Liberty standing, holding staff topped by a cap, and a large cornucopiae, symbols of industry in field - locomotive, sheaf of wheat, beehive; rev. Ornate wreath of fruit and flowers: engraved to: Lizter Bros. Newark Exhibit of Fertilizers. Some contact marks, lightly toned, Extremely Fine. Est. 100-150

540

Medals and Decorations, Etc. [12] Religious medal in bronze(3); Irish copper medal in honor of the Grand Parade 1875; Buffalo Nickel watch fob, 1913 TI EF; Statue of Liberty Museum Medal 1965, bronze; German 1939 decoration with ribbon; Lucky Charm with dateless Standing Liberty Quarter; 1911 PSAL Sunday World, bronze; 1925 NYC Grand Voiture medal, bronze; 1923 NYC city directory medal; 1959 Alaska 49th State souvenir dollar. Est. 30-50

541

A Final Numismatic Assortment. [Aprox 50] Assorted foreign coins, some silver. One ounce silver Spirit of America round; [50+] Est. 60-90

542

Coin Post Card Collection. [28] Exceptional collection of postcards featuring embossed metallic gold, silver and copper images of coins from many differe countries, with images of national flags. Argentina, Belgium, Bulgaria, Chile,Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Japan, Belgium,Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Japan, Mexico(2),Netherland, India, Peru, Portugal, Romania,Serbia, Siam, Switzerland, Transvaal, Turkry, United States(2), and Uruguay are all represented. Most were made in Bavaria. Most are unused and like new. One is dated 1909, indicating the approximate vintage of this grouping. As vast and complete an offering as you are likely to see anywhere. Est. 250-500

Page 57


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

SECOND SESSION Wednesday, May 22, 2013- 11:00 a.m. Lots 543-862 Spink Smythe, New York

WORLD PAPER MONEY

545 543 543

545

Brazil. Republica dos Estados Unidos do Brazil. ND (1919). 100 Mil Reis. P-68. No.97798. Face: Blue on multicolor underprint. A. Augusto Moreira Pena at center with handwritten signature atop, value in corners. Back: Brown. Overview of oceanside town with rock at distant shore, value left and right. Problem-free for the grade with full brightness remaining in the paper. Printed by ABNCo. F-VF.Est. 250-350

546

British Honduras. Government of British Honduras. 2 Dollars. 1st April 1964. (P29b) Purple on multicolor underprint. Elizabeth II. Arms at left. Back: Lathework. #H/I 392176. Uncirculated with just a touch of light teller handling. Est. 150-250

Australia. Commonwealth of Australia. One Pound. ND(1942). P26b. #H/24 681746. George VI, right. Green with blue and pink underprint. Black signatures. PMG Gem Uncirculated 66 EPQ. Est. 600-900

544 544

Australia. Commonwealth of Australia. One Pound. ND(1942). P26b. #H/24 681744. George VI, right. Green with blue and pink underprint. Black signatures. PMG Choice Uncirculated 64 Good Embossing. Est. 500-750

547 547

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Burma. Government of India. Provisional Government. 10 Rupees. (P-2b). No. R/46 782097. (1937). Dark Blue. George V. Black “LEGAL TENDER IN BURMA ONLY” overprint near the center. Elephants on back. Two moderate vertical folds and some trivial folds near the edges. VF-EF. Two pin holes visible only on close inspection. The paper retains a good deal of original crispness. Est. 1000-1500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

552

Burma Assortment of Five Notes. Military Administration of Burma. 1) 1 Rupee. 1945. (P-25a). Black serial number. AU. 2) 1 Rupee. 1945. (P-25b). Green serial number. AU. 3) 5 Rupees. (1945). (P-26a). No. J/63 311279. Brown, green. George VI. EF-AU, with pin holes on the left side. 4) Burma Currency Board. 1 Rupee. 1947. (P-30). EF. 5) 10 Rupee. (1947). (P32). EF. Pin holes. [5] Est. 60-90

553

Burma. Reserve Bank of India P-26a Offering. Military Administration. 5 Rupees. (1945). Brown, green. George VI. Fine, stains; VF-EF(2); Unc.(3). [6] Est. 400-600

548 548

549

Burma. Government of India. Provisional Government. 10 Rupees. (P-2b). No. R/46 702558. (1937). Dark Blue. George V. Black “LEGAL TENDER IN BURMA ONLY� overprint near the center. Elephants on back. Quarter folds, and corner tip folds. Fold soil and light graffiti on the back. Two pin holes visible only upon close inspection. Basically VF-EF. Est. 500-750 Burma. Reserve Bank of India Grouping. 1-4) 5 Rupees. (1938). (P-4). George VI. Elephant on back. VF-EF with pin holes. 5-7) 10 Rupees. (1938). (P-5). All VF-EF, all with pin holes, one with a larger pin hole. [7] Est. 175-250

554 554

Burma. Reserve Bank of India. Military Administration. 5 Rupees. (1945). (P-26b). Brown, green. George VI. Signed Deshimukh. Uncirculated. Two almost invisible pin holes in the left border. Bright and fresh. Est. 100-150

555 555

Consecutively numbered pair. Burma. Reserve Bank of India. Military Administration. 5 Rupees. (1945). (P26b). No.N/27 911925-926. Brown, green. George VI. Signed Deshimukh. Uncirculated. Pin holes in the left border. Bright and fresh. Est. 200-300

550 550

551

Burma. Reserve Bank of India. 100 Rupees. (1939). (P-6). No. A/1 188264. Blue, multicolor. George VI. Blue back with elephants. Pin holes on the left side, and some minor rust stains in the same area, otherwise VF-EF. A scarce and lovely note. Est. 1500-2500 Burma. Government of India 1 Rupee Grouping. 1-2) Military Administration. (P-25a) 1945. Black serial numbers. Two consecutive. 3-4) (P-25b). Green serial numbers. 5-8) Burma Currency board. (P-30). All AU to Uncirculated. No pin holes. One or two light age spots. Est. 200-300

556 556

Consecutively numbered pair. Burma. Reserve Bank of India. Military Administration. 5 Rupees. (1945). (P-26b). No.N/27 911923-924. Brown, green. George VI. Signed Deshimukh. Uncirculated. Pin holes in the left border. Bright and fresh. Est. 200-300

Page 59


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

557

Burma Assortment. 1-6) Government of Burma (1948) 1 Rupee. (P-34). Gray, green and pink. Peacock. Dow on back. All Unc. with pin holes. 7) 5 Rupees. (P-35). Brown. Statue, right. Woman with spinning wheel, back. Unc. Pin holes. 8-9) 10 Rupees. (P-36). Government of the Union of Burma. 10 Rupees. (1949). (P-36). Blue. Peacock. EF-AU. [9] Est. 200-300

561

A Large Assortment of Burma Notes. 1-2) Japanese Government. (1942-44) ½ Rupee. (P-13a) BA, VF; BB, AU. 3-5) 1 Rupee. (P14a) BA, BB, BC. Average VF. 6) 5 Rupees. (P-15a) EF. 7) Union Bank of Burma. (1953) 1 Rupee. (P-38). AU, pin holes. 8-9) 10 Rupees. (P-40). VF-EF; AU light rust. Both with pin holes. 10-11) 5 Kyats. (P-43). Both VF-EF with pin holes. 12-15) 10 Kyats. (P-44). EF-AU or so, with pin holes. One with a spindle hole. 16) 100 Kyats. (P45). VF-EF, pin holes, and a spindle hole. 17-18) 20 Kyats. (1958). (P-49). Both CU with pin holes. 1923) 50 Kyats. (P-50). (1958). AU with pin holes. 2440) 100 Kyats. (P-51). (1958). All AU or so, with pin holes. 41-44) 20 Kyats. (P-55). (1965). AU, pin holes. [44] Est. 200-300

562

Czechoslovokia. Theresienstadt. Concentration Camp Money. Campbell 4111-4117, Feller CZ 650656, S&B 701-707. Vignette of Moses holding the Ten Commandments. AU or better. [7] The most famous of World War II camp currency, these notes were part of an elaborate sham by the Nazi propaganda machine to present a “model camp” in Theresienstadt for Red Cross inspection. They were designed in 1942 by Czech artist, poet and inmate Peter Kien (who died in Auschwitz in 1944). Either Adolf Eichmann or Reinhard Heydrich, SS Reichprotecktor for Bohemia and Moravia, objected that the depiction of Moses looked “Aryan” The design was sent back. Kien was ordered to give Moses more stereotyped Semitic features. He modified Moses and the final design was engraved by Jindra Schmidt, a noted engraver of Czech banknotes, postage stamps and fiscal paper. Est. 200-300

563

Fiji. Government of Fiji. 10 Shillings. 1st October 1965. (P52e). Brown on blue underprint. George VI. Back: Lathework. #C/9 81522. Uncirculated, with a trace of teller handling, lower right. Est. 150-250

564

France. Allied Military Currency. Replacement Note 10 Francs. 1944. P-156. No.00777542. Large “X”, French tricolors on back. EF-AU. Corner folds as the result of being tipped into an album. Est. 150-250

558 558

Burma. Government of Burma P-35 Duo. 5 Rupees. (1948). Brown, multicolor. Chinze statue. Woman and spinning wheel on brown back. AU, pin holes. Est. 150-250

559

Burma. Government of Burma. 5 Rupees. (1948). (P-35). Brown, multicolor. Chinze statue. Woman and spinning wheel on brown back. Both VF with pin holes. [2] Est. 100-150

560 560

Burma. Central Bank of Myanmar. 200 Kyats. (P75b). ND (1991; 1998). No.7777777. Choice Uncirculated. Est. 400-600

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Unlisted SPECIMEN

568 568

Iceland. Islands Banki. 5 Kronur. 1920. #415240. Green and pink underprint. Geyser. Red and blue back with falcon, left. Uncirculated. Est. 300-500

569

India. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P25b). No.D/94 781452. Blue-gray, multicolor. Red serial numbers, George VI. Jones signature. AU. Vertical centerfold. Some rust near the edge of the left margin, more noticeable on the back. No pin holes are visible. Est. 450-650

565 565

French India. Banque de Indochine. 5 Rupees. ND(1937). SPECIMEN is spelled out through the use of perforations. No serial numbers. Like Pick 5s, but with LE PRESIDENT and LE DIRECTEUR GENERAL signatures. Brown, orange and multicolored. Woman with headdress, ancient statues. Woman with spear on back. Uncirculated. Est. 1500-2500

Important French India SPECIMEN

570 570

India. Government of India. 10 Rupees. ND. (P16b). No.N/61 551910. Blue. George V. Kelly signature. EF-AU. Two pin holes are well concealed in the left border. Light red stain near the lower right corner. Quite pleasing. Est. 400-600

566 566

567

French India. Banque de Indochine. 50 Rupees. ND(1936). SPECIMEN is spelled out through the use of perforations. No serial numbers or signatures. Multicolored. Ornamental stove, left. Bust of Dupeix and female head in circle on back. George VI, right. Green with blue and pink underprint. Black signatures. PMG Choice Uncirculated 63 EPQ. Est. 3000-5000 Germany. Allied Military Currency. 1,000 Mark. 1944. P-198b. -29 692876. (Russia). Large “M� back center. Uncirculated. Est. 150-250

571 571

India. Government of India. 10 Rupees. ND. (P16b). No.N/61 273293. Blue. George V. Kelly signature. Nice VF. Two pin holes barely visible in the left border. Est. 250-350

572

India. Government of India. 10 Rupees. ND. (P16b). No.O/13 105522. Blue. George V. Kelly signature. VF. Two pin holes. Moderate stains on the back. Est. 250-350

Page 61


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

573 573

India. Reserve Bank of India. 10 Rupees. ND. (1943). (P-19b). No. H/58 371916. Blue-violet, olive. George VI. Blue back. VF-EF. Two tiny pin holes in the left border, hardly visible. The paper is crisp and bright. Est. 200-300 576

574 574

575

India. Reserve Bank of India. 10 Rupees. ND. (1943). (P-19b). No. H/58 371917. Blue-violet, olive. George VI. Blue back. VF-EF. Two tiny pin holes in the left border, hardly visible. Some light stains on the back in the right margin. Est. 200-300 Eleven Scarcer India P-25a Black Serial Number Notes. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P25a). Blue-gray, multicolor. Black serial numbers. George VI coin. Jones signature. Uncirculated. Some with very light teller handling, many Choice and Gem. Est. 200-300

576

Grouping of Twenty Scarcer India P-25a Black Serial Number Notes. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P-25a). Blue-gray, multicolor. Black serial numbers. George VI coin. Jones signature. Uncirculated. Some with very light teller handling, many Choice and Gem. Est. 400-600

577

Similar Grouping of Twenty Scarcer India P-25a Black Serial Number Notes. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P-25a). Blue-gray, multicolor. Black serial numbers. George VI coin. Jones signature. Uncirculated. Some with very light teller handling, many Choice and Gem. Est. 400-600

578

Another Grouping of Twenty Scarcer India P-25a Black Serial Number Notes. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P-25a). Blue-gray, multicolor. Black serial numbers. George VI coin. Jones signature. Uncirculated. Some with very light teller handling, many Choice and Gem. Est. 400-600

Most single item lots can be viewed on our website www. spink.com, but not all multi-piece lots are imaged. Our specialist will gladly describe any multi-piece lot to you via Internet or telephone.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

585

Russia. State Credit Notes. 3 Rubles. 1905. Black and green on multicolor. (Pick 9) Average Fine. A few with minor stains. [13] Est. 20-30

586

Russia. State Credit Notes. Assorted 5 Rubles 1909 & 1917. (Pick 10a, P10b, P35a). Blue and multicolor. Average VF, perhaps better. [20] Est. 40-60

587

Russia. State Credit Notes. 10 Rubles. 1909. Olivegreen on green and red underprint. (Pick 11b) Fine(2 pcs.). (Pick 11c) Mostly EF-AU(19 pcs.). [21] Est. 30-50

588

Russia. State Credit Notes. 25 Rubles. 1909 (Pick 12b).Alexander II. Black on red and blue underprint. VF.(2), EF; AU,(2) one with staple hole. [5] Est. 30-50

589

Russia. State Credit Notes. 100 Rubles. Design of 1910 Catherine II. Dark brown on light brown and multicolor underprint.(Pick 13a) (1909-12) VF(2), (Pick 13b) (1912-17) VF(7). [9] Est. 60-90

590

Russia. State Credit Notes. 500 Rubles. Design of 1912, issued (1912-1917) (Pick 14b). Peter I. Black on green and multicolor underprint. VF(3), VFEF,(2) EF(3).[9] Est. 100-200

591

Russia. State Credit Notes. ND (1915). 1 Ruble. (Pick 15). Blue on brown underprint. Average VF, perhaps better. A clean and attractive groupi. [21] Est. 60-90

592

Assorted Russian Notes and Bonds. Pick 1(1), Pick 8(1), Pick 10(1); Pick 15(3 signature combinations); Pick 13(10 notes, 9 signature combinations; Pick 14(1); Pick 27; Pick 31(2); Pick 31(1); Pick 37(1) [31] Est. 75-150

593

South Korea. Bank of Chosun. 5 Won. ND (1949). P-1. Archway at right, building at center of back. AU. Est. 75-125

594

Uruguay. 100 Pesos. 1887. (PS215). Uncut pair.No.07159. Plate A & B. Unirculated, but the top note has a pin hole n the upper right corner. Est. 75-125

579 579

580

India. Government of India. 1 Rupee. 1940. (P25b). No.D/94 785842. Blue-gray, multicolor. Red serial numbers, George VI coin. Jones signature. AU. Vertical centerfold. A few minor rust spots. No pin holes are visible. Est. 500-750 Israel. 50 Sheqalim. Uncut sheet of 12. P46. Uncirculated. Est. 20-30

581 581

Malaya and British Borneo. Board of Commissioners of Currency. 10 Dollars. 1st March 1961. (P9c). Large serial numbers, series B. Red and dark brown on multicolor underprint. Farmer plowing. Tiger’s head watermark. Back: Arms of the 5 states. #B/4 059061. AU. Est. 500-750

582

Russia. State Credit Notes. 3 Rubles. 1898 design, issued (1903-1909) (Pick 2b). Blue on brown underprint. Green back. Both F-VF. [2] Est. 100-200

583

Russia. State Credit Notes. 3 Rubles. 1898 design, issued (1903-1909) (Pick 2b). Blue on brown underprint. Green back. All three basically F+ with minor stains or edge splits. [3] Est. 100-150

584

Russia. State Credit Note. 100 Rubles. Design of 1898, issued (1909-1912) (Pick 5c). Catherine II. Black on tan underprint. VF-EF. Est. 150-250

Page 63


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

BONDS AND SHARES

598

State of Alabama, $1000 8% bond, 1870, train and blacksmith, eagle in corners, gold seal and green $1000 overprint, signed by Smith as governor. IU. VF. Est. 75-125

599

Board of the County of Cochise (Territory of Arizona) 1881. 500 Dollars Gold Coin. Impressive orange metalic borders and gold seals. Statehouse. VF+, minor fold junction holes. Est. 300-450

Federal, State and City Loans

595 595

United States Loan Office (CT) 1793. $331.30. No 7. Heraldic eagle in oval frame. Signed by William Imlay as Commissioner. IC. Minor foxing near the top, otherwise VF. After the Revolutionary War an agreement was reached by the states to assume portions of the Revolutionary War debt. In return, the northern states agreed to move the Capital of the United States to a southern location. One of the earliest examples of US scripophily, and probably very undervalued in today’s market. Est. 500-750

596

Liberty Loan of 1917. $50. Jefferson. Statue of Liberty. Blue 50 and Treasury seal. Horizontal format with two full pages of coupons bound. EF, but there are two small body holes near the center and a tear near the top. Est. 200-300

600 600

Bond of the State of California for War Indebtedness. $100. Specifically “Expeditions against the Indians.” Signed on the back by John Bigler, the Govenor of California. Indian with bow and arrows. George Washington. Ornate red back and embossed seal. An Act approved in 1857. Between 1851 and 1859 the State of California spent over $1,000,000 to remove Indians from their lands and indenture Indian children. VF details This historic example is mostly intact, but there are small pieces missing, the seal is punch through in sections, and the lower right coupons are torn and repaired. Still a very compelling example of a bond that would cost many thousands of dollars in higher grade. Certainly a good candidate for restoration or framing. Est. 1000-1500

601

Territory of Montana. Warrant. $100. Blue. Girl, dog, sailor. IU. VF+. Est. 50-75

602

NJ. City of New Brunswick. 1873. Mostly blue, $1000’s. There are a few green $500s. State arms. Red seal. VF+, but some with edge splits. Should be seen. Sold as is [49] Est. 100-150

597 597

Third Liberty Loan., $100 4-1/4% gold bond of 1928, #2425352, Andrew Jackson above, torch below, red underprint “THIRD LIBERTY LOAN,” blue treasury seal, orange eagle on reverse, facsimile signatures of Teehee and McAdoo, coupons 17-21, stains at right, uneven coupon edges, trimmed into margin at lower left, VF. Est. 150-250

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

William McKinley Signs as Governor

604 604 603 603

State of Ohio (OH) 1894. $1,000. No.85. Red ruled border. Signed by William McKinley as Governor. IC. VF+. Fresh, bright, and one of the most attractive examples we have seen of this issue. The Governor’s signature is barely grazed by the ultra thin razor cancelation. William McKinley was Governor of Ohio from 18921896. He defeated William Jennings Bryan and became President of the United States, serving from 1897-1901, when he was assassinated. The SpanishAmerican War, the annexation of Hawaii, the acquisition of Puerto Rico, Philippines, Guam and American Samoa all happened during his presidency. Est. 300-450

Kansas and Nebraska Territorial Imprints\nOn this Land Speculation Certificate Olena, Kansas Territory (K. T.) 1857. Red and blue. Certificate for “SIX UNDIVIDED LOTS.” No. 243. IU. Eagle, shield and banner. Eight devil’s heads in the bottom border. Printed by the “ADVERTISER JOB OFFICE BROWNSVILLE, N.T.” (Nebraska Territory). IU. EF. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 left the decision of whether the then territories of Kansas and Nebraska would become slave or free states based on how the citizens there voted. Anti-slavery forces poured into both territories which led to the violence in “Bleeding Kansas” during the period from 1854 to1861. The purpose of this land company may have been to recruit anti-slavery settlers who would then vote for Kansas to be a free state. It is also possible that the promoters of this certificate were attempting to populate this area in the hopes that the Pacific Railroad might be built in or near the location of the town, significantly increasing land values. Est. 175-250

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Page 65


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Railroads 605

Albany & Susquehanna RR 1906. $1000. Red. Locomotive with tender 1054. ABN. IU. Extension of maturity stamp. Mostly, EF [104] Est. 100-150

606

Atlantic City & Shore Company (NJ) Streetcars. 100 shs. SPECIMEN. Orange. SBN. EF. Est. 50-75

607

New Jersey Street Railways. All unissued. [4] Atlantic City & Shore RR; Middlesex & Somerset Traction; Central Passenger Rwy; Atlantic & Suburban Rwy. All EF. Est. 50-75

610

California Eastern Extension RR (CA) 1859. $1,000. Red. 1000. Train with mountains in the background. Sailor and miner. Washington and Franklin. VF with some minor age toning and small pieces out of the top margin. Est. 200-400

608 608

Baltimore and Ohio RR 1901. 100 shs. Preferred Stock Trust. Green. Locomotive in circle. Issued to and signed on verso by EH Harriman. The punch cancels do not affect Harriman’s signature. A portrait of Harriman is included. IC. EF+. Harriman began his business career at the age of fourteen as a clerk in a Wall Street firm. By twenty-two he was a member of the New York Stock Exchange. He rebuilt bankrupt railroads, and eventually became a Director of the Union Pacific. He financed and traveled with Arctic expeditions. Est. 200-300

611

Scarce Leland Stanford Signed Document 611

609 609

Brooklyn, Flatbush & Coney Island RR (NY) 1878. 10 shs. No.257. Trains, river and village beyond, IU. Bright VF. Five are reported. Cox values these at $500-$750. Est. 200-400

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Central Pacific RR (CA) 1882. Deed. Yuba County. Signed by Leland Stanford as President of the Central Pacific Railroad. IU. VF+, with a clear, crisp signature. A letter from the Land Department of the railroad is also included. Leland Stanford was an American financier, politician, and railroad magnate who financed and promoted the Southern Pacific and the Central Pacific Railroads, completing the western link of the transcontinental railroad. He was Governor of California, and founded Stanford University in memory of his son. Stanford’s autograph is virtually unavailable on bonds and shares. Est. 300-500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Scarce and Desirable New Jersey Central SPECIMEN

614 614 612 612

Central Railroad Company of New Jersey SPECIMEN. $50,000. 1887 100-year bond. Olive. Large locomotive in a circle near bottom. Dockworkers, blacksmith, train and mills, steam ferry. A very scarce and very attractive New Jersey railroad bond by ABN that you may never have the opportunity to acquire again. $1000-1500 in Cox. VF+. Est. 500-1000

Chesapeake, Ohio & Southwestern RR 1886. 91 shs. Common Capital Stock. #138. Green. Train stops at station, boats beyond. Signed by Collis P. Huntington as president. IC. Light stains, upper left. Huntington’s signature with three small punch cancels, otherwise VF+. Est. 200-300

Signed by John D. Rockefeller

615 615 613 613

Chartiers Railway (PA) 1887. 10 shs. #1074. Train on bridge passes mill. Issued to and signed on the back by A. W. Mellon. Punch canceled. Red ink notation at left. IC. VF+. Andrew William Mellon, 1855-1937, was an American banker, industrialist, philanthropist, art collector, and Secretary of the Treasury under Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover. Est. 200-300

Chicago Terminal Transfer RR (IL), $100 shares, common stock, 1898, #1655, issued to John D. Rockefeller and signed by him on the verso. Justice at top flanked by circular frames with trains. Crisp, bold uncancelled signature of the famous Standard Oil founder. IC, light edge wear and toning, VF+. Est. 750-1500

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

616

Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis & Chicago Rwy (IN) 1885. #3085. 100 shs. Green. View at North Bend, Ohio. Issued to and signed on the back by Collis Porter Huntington. One punch affects top of last T in Huntington. Stub reattached at left. Paste stains. FBN. VF+. Huntington, Collis P. American railroad tycoon (1821-1900); with Stanford, Hopkins, and Crocker, one of the “big four” who built the first continental railway; developed the Southern Pacific; founded what would become Northrop Grumman. Est. 100-150

617

Colorado & Southern Rwy (CO) 1881. $1000. No.00000. SPECIMEN. Brown. Trains. EF+. POC. Scarce Western railroad bond. Est. 100-200

618

Colorado Central RR (Wyoming Territory) 1880. 100 shs. No.12. Distant train with Rocky Mountains beyond. (Different design from the Colorado issue.) IC. VF+. Est. 200-400

619

Denver, Western & Pacific RR (CO) 1881. $1000. No.71. Train in front of Victorian station. Miners. Flag bearer. IC. VF+. Less than half a dozen reported. Est. 150-300

620

The Dry Dock, East Battery & Battery RR (NY) 1918. $500. No.C79. Green. Street car. This is one of only two examples reported. IU. VF, with a few pin holes in the left border. Est. 100-150

621

Fredericksburg, Orange & Charlottesville RR (VA) 1872. $1000. No.444. Green and gold. Virginia arms, Natural Bridge. IU. VF+. Perhaps a dozen reported. A large, impressive bond. Est. 150-300

622

Millard Fillmore Signs as Comptroller

623 623

Hudson & Bershire RR (NY) 1848. $1,000. No.60. Ornate border. Signed by Millard Fillmore as Comptroller. IC. VF+, with some mounting remnants at the top. A handsome example, and the future President’s signature is lightly affected by four small punch cancels. Millard Fillmore served as Vice President under Zachary Taylor from 1849-1850, and became President after Taylor’s death. He ran for re-election in 1852 and 1856 but did not win. Est. 300-500

624

Lake Erie & Louisville Rwy (OH & IN) 1872. $1000. No.980. Red. Train. Woman. Gold seal. IU. EF. Est. 100-200

625

Vanderbilt Duo. Michigan Central RR. (MI), $5,000. 5% 1885, #945, issued to William K. Vanderbilt, signed by William H. on reverse. Train flanked by allegorical female and shepherd, brown and black, stub remnant left. IC, two small holes touching the signature, else VF New York & Harlem RR (NY), 3½% Registered Gold Bond, $10,000, 1900, #X702, signed by Wm. H. Vanderbilt, vignette of Commodore Vanderbilt, green, ABN. IC. VF+.[2] Est. 150-250

Hannibal & St. Joseph RR (MO) 1873. 100 shs. Preferred 7%. No.537. Full pink tint by National Bank Note Co. Locomotive faces right. Red RN-U1 25 Cent imprinted revenue. Not in Castenholz. Cox reports two. VF, rough top edge. Est. 200-400

T

E L E P H O N E

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I D D I N G

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

626

Missouri, Kansas & Texas Rwy (NY) 1880. 100 shs. Green. Cattle, cherubs. Signed by Jay Gould as president. One small punch affects Gould’s signature, but not excessively. IC. VF+. Stub lightly attached. Jay Gould (1836-1892) was one of America’s most colorful financiers and premier robber barons. He was involved in a series of railroad stock manipulations. Est. 60-90

627

Missouri, Kansas & Texas RR 1892. 100 shs. No.02595. Green. Train. Issued to William Rockefeller and signed by him on the back. IC. VF, stains, left, and age toning in the margins. Excellent signature. William Rockefeller was the younger brother of John D. Rockefeller. He entered business at the age of 16, clerking for a miller in Cleveland before he joined his brother John’s produce business a year later. When John D. Rockefeller entered the oil refining industry he invited William to take charge of the Rockefeller and Andrews exporting business in New York. Est. 150-250

628

Mobile & Montgomery Rwy (AL). 1881. 100 shs. Capital stock. No.523. Orange. Locomotive leaves roundhouse. Stub attached, left. IC. Lightly damaged corners, and some edge toning, else VF. Est. 100-150

629

Mohawk & Hudson RR (NY) 1839. Transfer form for 200 shs. Signed by August Belmont. Uncirculated. Scarce. August Belmont (1816-1890) was a banker and land proprietor. At fourteen, he was employed as an errand boy in the banking house of the Rothschild’s at Frankfort, and became their clerk in the branch at Naples three years later and eventually taking charge. At the age of twenty-one, Belmont arrived in New York as the agent of the Rothschilds. Est. 150-250

630

Montgomery & West Point R R. (AL), 8% Bonds, 1867, $500, #383, all 11 unperforated coupons attached; And, $100 #559, no coupons. Train. Large blue overprint $500, $100. RN-P5, Henry Siebert litho. Numerous slit cancels, else VF.[2] Est. 100-150

631 631

Morgan Patent Elevated Rwy (IL) 1876. Bloomington. 25 shs. No.101. “PATENT” in the title is ruled out. Passenger cars ride above the streets of a busy city on elevated tracks held up by ornate metal arches. A very elaborate custom vignette. IU. VF+. First this cataloger has ever seen. Unlisted in Cox. Est. 200-400

Signed by J.P. Morgan

632 632

New Jersey Junction. 1886. $1000 One Hundred Year 4% First Mortgage Bond. Signed by J. P. Morgan on the verso. A beautiful example of this very popular bond. IU. EF+. Comes with background information. Est. 400-600

633

New Jersey Junction RR (NY) 1886. $1,000 4%. #2717. Brown. Ships on the Hudson. Signed by John Pierpont Morgan and HC Fahnestock on trustee certificate on verso. Partially prepared, but not fully issued. Not canceled. EF+. John Pierpont Morgan (1837-1913) became one of the richest men in the United States with shrewdly managed investments in railroads, steel, and gold. Est. 200-300

IC – Issued Cancelled IU – Issued Uncancelled UU – Unissued Uncancelled

Page 69


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

634

New York & Harlem RR (NY) 1873. 100 shs. Orange imprinted revenue stamp. Train. Dog, lower left. Signed by William H. Vanderbilt, son of Cornelius Vanderbilt. POC. F-VF. The Commodore initially thought that William was not worthy of inheriting his business empire. One day, William outsmarted the Commodore on a deal involving the purchase of a load of hay, and the Commodore relented and put him in charge of his Staten Island railroad interests. William made the most of the opportunity, and eventually took charge of the Commodore’s holdings. Est. 100-200

635

New York & Queens County RR (NY) 1909. 2 shs. No.308. Red. Streetcars. IU. VF+, light staple holes and water stains near the top, not distracting. Only one other reported thus far. Est. 100-200

636

New York Cable Rwy 1884. $1000. Red underprints. Printed signatures of Thomas Fortune Ryan on all of the coupons. EF. Est. 50-75

639

Signed by J. C. Freemont

640 640

637

Pennsylvania & North Western RR (PA) 1893. #842. Train at station. Issued to and endorsed on the back by Edward J. Berwind, the coal magnate who was reputed to have held largest private holding of American coal reserves. $1 documentary stamp, right. Stub lightly pasted, left. VF+. The signature is not canceled. The Edward J. Berwind House is a mansion located on 2 East 64th Street and Fifth Avenue on the Upper East Side in New York City. Est. 200-300

638

Pine Creek Rwy (PA) 1885. $1000 bond. No. 470. Brown. Farmer, Justice, train. Signed by William K. Vanderbilt and Chauncey Depew. IC. EF. Est. 30-50

Prospect Park & South Brooklyn RR (NY) 1907. One share. No.23. Red seal. Steam locomotive leaves tunnel. IC. EF. Less than half a dozen reported. Est. 150-300

Southern Trans-Continental RR / Memphis, El Paso & Pacific RR 1868. Construction “A” Series Certificate. The Memphis, El Paso & Pacific Railroad acknowledges itself in debt to John C. Freemont for 50 acres of agricultural land or $1,000 bond. Signed on the verso by John C. Freemont. In virtually New condition. IU. John C. Freemont was an American explorer, soldier and political leader. In 1841 Fremont surveyed the lower course of the Des Moines River. That same year he married the daughter of Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri, and through his influence went on to explore much of the territory between the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific Ocean. Much of the land he explored later became part of the United States. His opposition to slavery, the successes, hardships and dangers of his exploring expeditions, and his part in the conquest of California led to his nomination for the presidency in 1856 by the Republicans, but he was defeated. Est. 250-500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Three Generations of Vanderbilts Sign This Proxy

643 643

641 641

642

Spuyten Duyvil & Port Morris RR (NY) 1873. Proxy. Blue paper. Signed by Cornelius Vanderbilt (the “Commodore”), William H. Vanderbilt (his eldest son), and Cornelius Vanderbilt (his grandson). IU. EF.’The Commodore’ (1794-1877) founded the family fortune in steam ferries and railroads in and around New York and became one of the richest men of his time. In 1818, Vanderbilt was just 24 and already in business. That year he began working for Thomas Gibbons running cut-rate steamship lines between Manhattan and New Brunswick. They ran into trouble with Fulton & Livingston, the line founded by steamship pioneer Robert Fulton, which had a monopoly on Hudson River transport. Gibbons and Vanderbilt were sued, but won when the case reached the Supreme Court. Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843 1899) was an American socialite, heir, businessman. He was the favorite grandson of “Commodore” Cornelius Vanderbilt, who left him $5 million, and the eldest son of William Henry Vanderbilt, who left him close to $70 million. He succeeded both of them as head of the New York Central Railroad in 1885. All three signatures rarely appear together on a railroad related document. Est. 1000-1500 Staten Island Midland Rwy (NY) 1915. $500. SPECIMEN. Green. Streetcar. ABN Litho. EF. Est. 100-150

Sunbury & Erie RR (PA) 1853. No.114. One share. Train under arched title. Three vignettes in circular frames at each end (farmer, blacksmith, sailor, covered wagon, sailing ship and canal barge). A beautiful example of the engraver’s (Toppan, Casilear) art. Three very small hole cancels and two small pin holes hardly distract from the beauty of this lovely example. Cox reports only two pieces and values them at $1,000$1,500. IC. VF. Est. 500-1000

644 644

Swatara R R (PA) 1848. No.111. Two shares. Train between trees. Blacksmith, Washington, sailor, right. Medallion head, left. Pine Grove, Schuylkill County. IU. Handwritten transfer in pen near the let end panel, otherwise VF+. Perhaps a half dozen known, and rarely seen at auction. Est. 300-500

Page 71


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

650

Wilmington & Northern Rail Road 1889. #1,082. 20 shares. Green. Signed by H.A. Du Pont as president. Diamond cut cancellation far from signature. VF. Henry Algernon Du Pont (1838-1926) was a Union army officer who was awarded a Medal of Honor for brilliant action at Cedar Creek during the Civil War. Du Pont was also U.S. Senator from Delaware, 1906-1917. Perfect signatures on this issue are scarce. Est. 100-150

651

Alabama Related Rails. Birmingham, Ensley & Bessemer (AL) 1912 Orange, gold seal. IC. EF; Northern Alabama Rwy (AL) 1898 Green. IC. EF; South & North Alabama (AL) 1878. IC. VF, stains on back; Mobile & Grand (AL) 1866 Large ornate red $500. IC. VF+; Alabama & Vicksburg Rwy (MS) 1890 Stub left. IC. VF, stains; Canton, Aberdeen & Nashville in Alabama UU; Georgia and Alabama Rwy (MD) $1000 5% Gold Bond 1895 Orange. UC; Alabama Barge & Coal (CT) Green. IU. [8] Est. 150-250

645 645

United States Express (NY) 1899. No.16807. 12 shs. Green. Locomotive with “USA EX” on a freight car, map of the United States. Est. 250-500

646

Scarce Color Proof Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Rwy (KS) 188_. 10 shs. Rare Color PROOF. Green. Locomotive AMERICA faces right. Cox reports a similar example in blue, but no issued examples are reported of this type. VF+. “Oct 2, 1881” in red crayon. This example was used for approval purposes. Changes to the original layout are indicated in pencil is indicated in red crayon. Est. 100-200

647

Washington & Columbia River RR (WA) 1893. 100 $1000. No.0000. SPECIMEN. Orange. Locomotive #15 faces left. 5” wide vignette of track workers and train at the bottom. ABN. Cox does not mention any issued examples. VF+. Est. 100-200

648

Wichita Union Terminal Rwy (KS) 190_. $1000 4 ½% Registered Gold Bond. SPECIMEN. Green. WUTR locomotive faces right. HBN. EF. Cox does not mention any issued examples. Est. 200-400

652

Pre-1900 Rails. Peoria & Bureau Valley 1873. 40 shs; Missouri, Kansas and Texas Extension 1880. One share; Washington Branch of the Baltimore and Ohio 1848. 9 shs; Mobile & Ohio 1893. 100 shs. Reattached stub left; Peoria, Decatur & Evansville Rwy 1888. 100 shs. All VF+, POC. [5] Est. 100-150

653

Notable Personalities on Railroad Certificates. Milwaukee and St. Paul Rwy 1873. 10 shs. Green. Signed by Russel Sage; Cedar Rapids and Missouri River (IA). 1867. 97 shs. Purple. Trains. Signed by J. Insley Blair. Stub attached; Iron Mountain of Memphis (TN). 1888. One share. Train. Issued to George Gould. All IC. VF+. [3] Est. 100-150

654

Mostly New Jersey Rail Shares. [10] Trenton & New Brunswick RR 1902; United New Jersey RR & Canal(2)1890 & 1939; Erie RR SPECIMEN; Lehigh & Hudson River Rwy UU; Passaic Valley & Peapack RR UU; Stanhope RR UU; Whippany River RR UU; Fonda, Johnstown & Gloversville RR UU; Western Maryland Rwy 1953. Est. 100-150

655

Additional Street Railway Grouping. [7] Brooklyn Rapid Transit IC; New York Rwys IC; Nassau Electric RR UC; Branford Electric Rwy Assoc. $50 UU; York Rwys IC; West Penn Rwys IC; Stark Electric RR IC; All VF+. Est. 50-75

Automobiles 649 649

Williams Valley Railroad & Mining (PA) 1845. 6 shs. No.928-933. Unusual small format. Coal train flanked by an allegorical male and female under the arched title. Franklin, right. Medallion heads, left. Less than half a dozen are known, and this is the only one reported in the 1840s. IU. VF. Est. 100-200

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656

Auburn Automobile (IN). 1932. Fractional Share. IU. VF+. Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

660

Winslow Motor Carriage (DE) 1900. 10 shs. Brown. Delaware state arms. Gold seal. Signed by Arthur S. Winslow as President. IU. Top and bottom edges are not straight, otherwise VF-EF. Est. 60-90

661

Trio of Automobile Certificates. 1) Tucker 1948. Brown. IU. Staple tear upper right. 2) Lincoln Motor, 1920. Temporary Certificate. Orange. Signed by Nash and Leland. IC. 3) Willys-Overland Motors. 1946. Orange Warrant. IU. 4-10) Chrysler 1977 pin holes; American Motors 1963 stain; Studebaker 1964; Packard Motor Car(2) 1946, 1954; Ford Motor 1970s UC; General Motors 1982. Most are IC, VF+.(10) Est. 120-180

662

Automobile Assortment. 1) Rickenbacker Motor (MI) 1926. Orange. 25 shs. IU. VF+. 2) Ben-Hur Motor Car (OH) Green. 1917. 10 shs. IU. Trimmed to the borders, else VF. UU. 3) Flint Motor (MI) 1925. One share. Purple. IU. VF+. Also included are Nash UU; Durant 1923 IU; Peerless 1926 IC; Hudson 1954 IC; Reo 1916 IC. Most are VF+. (8) Est. 120-180

657 657

David Dunbar Buick (DE) 1923. #190. 5 shs. Green. Eagle with wings spread wide. Signed by David Dunbar Buick as president. IU. Minor stain, otherwise VF+. Clear, uncanceled signature of Buick as President. David Dunbar Buick (1854-1929) was a Scottish-American who began his business career by developing a process to affix porcelain to bath tubs. His interest in automobiles resulted in the organization of the Buick Manufacturing Company in 1902. It was later merged into General Motors. Buick did not survive the relationship with General Motors and he died in relative obscurity. Est. 200-300

658

Reo Motor Car (MI) 1916. #LO314. 26 shs. Olive. Winged REO logo flanked by allegorical women. Signed by R.E. Olds as president. One punch barely affects Olds bold signature. Exceptionally nice for this issue. Paper remnant on the back, otherwise VF+.\n Ransom E. Olds (1864-1950), was the automobile inventor and manufacturer who founded the Olds Motor Works which made the Oldsmobile, the first successful American car. Est. 75-125

663 663

Accelerating Steam Navigation Co. (NY) 1841. 3 shs. No. 303. Plate A. Large red “THREE� protector. An angel lifts a curtain revealing an early airship, the Dove progressing over water. At left is a large white 3. James Madison, right. A rare bank note style layout by Durand & Company, New York. $100,000 shares were authorized at $1 each, and they apparently circulated as money alongside of the obsolete currency of this time period. A wonderful early aviation piece, appreciated by scripophilists and paper money collectors as well. The margins are a bit rough, otherwise VF. Est. 400-600

659 659

Rolls Royce of America (DE) 1932. 100 shs. Preferred. No. 1134. Green. Woman with sword and lion. American Bank Note. IU. EF, small pin hole. Est. 250-500

Page 73


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Aviation Wonderful Early Aviation Certificate

667

Lehman Brothers Holdings. SC- USB “Proof” or model. Shares. Blue. City of Montgomery in oval frame. Founders in the lower corners. EF.Lehman was the fourth-largest investment bank in the US before declaring bankruptcy in 2008. Est. 500-750

664 664

Central Airport (DE) 1944. 20 shs. No.0 090. Green. Bi-plane flies by hanger. IC. VF+. Est. 150-250

668 668

Merchants & Mechanics Bank of Wheeling (VA) 1857. 3 shs. No.1307. Lovely vignette of a nude young Mercury representing Commerce, sailing ship beyond. IU. VF, with some minor bleed through from an endorsement on the back. Est. 150-250

669

Pennsylvania & Utah Banking SPECIMEN Shares. [3] Media - 69th St. Trust (PA); Miners National Bank of Wilkes-Barre (PA); Zions Bancorporation (UT) 1993. All EF. Est. 50-75

670

New York Banking Shares. [12] J. P. Morgan & Co. 1979. IC EF graffiti; Chase National Bank of the City of New York 1933 IC VF+; Chase Manhattan Corp. 1970 IC EF; Broadway Central Bank 1924 IU VF+; Times Square Trust IU VF+; Chemical Bank & Trust UC EF; SPECIMENS - Wells Fargo Bank & Trust; Bank of New York; Farmers-Matteawan National Bank; New York Bank for Savings; Chemical Corn Exchange Bank; Seaway Bank. Est. 100-150

671

Ballantine & Co (NJ) 1900. 4 shs. No.1. Blue. Signed by Robert F. Ballentine, the last surviving son of the founder. This famous brand of beer was brewed in Newark, NJ from the 1840s through the 1970s. IC. VF+. Est. 750-1250

672

Chock Full O’ Nuts SPECIMEN bond due 1981. Blue. Semi-nude mail with globe. SBN. EF. Est. 50-75

673

Pocahontas Consolidated Collieries, Incorporated (VA).1907. 100 Preferred shs. Brown. ABN. Pocahontas saving John Smith. IC. VF+. Est. 50-75

665 665

Stanley Aerial Navigation (CA) 1901. 5 shs. No. 803. Green underprint. Gold Seal. Justice. Stanley published an illustrated brochure promising potential investors that his airship would successfully fly from San Francisco to San Jose and back within an hour, making Hindenburg’s Zeppelin look silly. There are several assessments on the back, showing that the enterprise was not immediately profitable. IU. VF+. A beautiful example of this early aviation piece. Est. 600-900

General Subjects 666

Assorted Share Certificates. [6]American General Insurance; Greyhound; Cumberland Telephone 1903; Peoples Transfer 1891; Bay Ridge UC; Schuylkill Water UU. The first four are IC. Most are VF+. Est. 30-50

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

674 674

Doctor Gray’s Great Eastern Bitters Manufacturing (NJ) 1880. 50 shs. Capital stock. Vignette of the giant sixmasted iron side-paddle steam ship “Great Eastern” . Green undertint with pink seal and red $300,000. IU. VF+. Est. 300-500

675

Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea (NJ) June 1, 1916. #31. 15 shs. Temporary certificate. Ornate green border. Stub attached. Signed by George H. Hartford as President. IC. VF+. The signature is clear and not canceled Est. 300-500

Harlem Heirs Claim Over 100 Acres of Prime Manhattan Real Estate

676 676

Harlem Associated Heirs Title Company (MD) 1892. 66 shs. No.1010. Red. Illustration of a 1778 British map of Manhattan Island. IU. VF+ details, four short edge splits backed with archival paper. There is a stain in the upper right corner. We know of only one other example. This certificate represents the claim of various heirs for over 1000 acres of land and water in Manhattan from 74th to 128th streets. Based on a land grant given in 1666 (the year the Spink was founded), by English Governor Richard Nichols to five men. Potential heirs would sign over their shares in the property to the company, then pay a fee, with the fees being used to pay the expenses of pursuing the claim in the courts. This certificate would entitle the share holder to a portion of the proceeds. If the claim was successful the value of the land at the time could have been many millions of dollars. A certificate similar to this one was featured on an episode of the PBS television show, History Detectives, which aired on October 2011. Based on the research done by the History Detectives, no court ruling in this particular case was found. However, decisions were found in similar cases brought by other groups of Harlem heirs in which the courts ruled that the heirs’ claims were indeed legitimate. The courts would not enforce them due to the complexities of sorting out the titles and heirs over a period of several hundred years, and due to the possible repercussions this could have had on the stock market during a period of recession. A fascinating piece of financial and judicial history. Est. 1750-2500

Page 75


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

677 677

International Business Machines (NY) SPECIMEN shares. Brown. Logo in circular frame flanked by two seated allegorical figures. Facsimile signature of Thomas Watson, Jr. as president. SBN. EF. One of the most admired companies of the 20th century. “THINK” seriously about buying it. Est. 100-150

681 681

United States Automatic Perfuming (IL) 1891. 20 Shares. No.44. Gold underprint of an early and ornate perfume vending machine. Gold seal. VF+ in appearance. There are edge splits repaired with paper tape but they are not distracting in any way. This is a very scarce, desirable and early vending machine certificate, rarely offered at auction. Est. 250-500

678 678

Pabst Brewing Company (WI) 1889. 100 shs. No.783. Olive. Milwaukee breweries. Signed twice, by Fred Pabst as president, and on the transfer form on the back. IU. New condition. Est. 250-500

679

Pabst Brewing Company (WI) 19__. Shares. Olive. Milwaukee breweries. UU. EF+. Est. 25-50

680

Phillip Best Brewing Co (WI), 1 $1000 shs, Milwaukee, 1873, #89 signed by Fred(erick) Pabst as president, and issued to his son, Charles Best, Jr., vignettes of the Empire Brewery and South Side Brewery buildings, black, Milwaukee, Litho, folds, else VF+. Also signed by Emil Schandein as Vice President and Charles Best, Jr. on the reverse. The Phillip Best Brewing Company is the forerunner of today’s Pabst Brewing Co. With Pabst at the helm of the company, the company changed its name to the Pabst Brewing Co. and became the largest brewery in the world by the turn of the century. Est. 150-250

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682 682

Wisconsin Cabinet & Panel (NJ) 1917. #8. 500 shs. Gold with gold seal and underprint. Eagle with shield. Signed twice by Thomas Edison. Once as president and again on the back. The stub is lightly attached and there are two triangular cut out cancels at the bottom affect the signature. Otherwise VF+. The second Edison signature is on the back, and it is crystal clear an uncanceled. Also included is an address by Charles Edison celebrating the 95th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Edison and listing forty-two inventions Thomas Edison worked on for the war effort during World War I. Est. 400-600


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

683 683

684

Armat Moving Picture (WV) 1903. 167 shs. Green seal. Eagle. Issued to Stilson Hutchins, founder of the Washington Post. Signed by Thomas Armat as President. IC. EF. Armat and his then partner, Jenkins developed a moving picture projector named the Phantascope and debuted it in September 1895 at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta. The two co-inventors subsequently broke up over patent issues. Jenkins tried to claim sole inventorship, but was turned down and he sold out to Armat, who sold the patent to Thomas Edison. Edison marketed the machine as the ‘Vitascope’. The projector was first used in a public screening in New York City beginning April 23, 1896. Working for Edison, Armat refined the projector. His contributions to the movie industry were recognized with a special Academy award in 1947. Est. 500-750

685

Horse Racing Shares. [4].Atlantic City Racing Association 1951. Signed by John B. Kelly, Grace Kelly’s father. IC VF+; Monmouth Park Jockey Club 1963(2) IC. VF+; Narragansett Racing Association UU Est. 40-60

686

Ringling Brothers - Barnum & Bailey Combined Shows, Inc. (DE). Blue. UU. SPECIMEN stamps on the back. EF. Est. 100-150

American League Baseball Company of St. Louis (MO) 1936. 10 shs. No.184 “AMERICAN LEAGUE” banner across globe. IC. VF, pin cancels, small edge split in the bottom margin. Est. 250-500

Important Columbian Exposition Item

687 687

World’s Columbian Exposition 1893 Visitors Official Certificate of the great Ferris Wheel Register. In Midway Plaisance. 1893. Brown decorative borders. Blue underprint of the Great Ferris Wheel. Red seal. Portrait of George W.Y. Ferris, designer and constructor. A truly rare and desirable piece, perhaps the most sought after example of World’s Columbian Exposition paper ephemora. VF+. The Great Ferris Wheel was the centerpiece of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. The diameter of the wheel was 250 feet. Each of its 36 cars held 60 people who were treated to two full revolutions taking about twenty minutes. When running at full capacity it carried 2,160 passengers per trip at 50 cents each. When the Columbian Exposition ended it was sold and operated as an amusement park ride. It was finally destroyed for scrap metal in 1906. Est. 1500-2500

Page 77


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

690 688 688

690

North American Land (PA) 1795. 2 shs. No. 468. Signed by John Marshall as Secretary and Robert Morris as President. A premium quality example, uncanceled, with just a hint of ink erosion through the signature, and two tiny slits in the paper below Marshall’s signature. IU. VF+. Est. 500-750

691

Mineral Shares. [4]Allentown Iron (PA) 1880. IC

World’s Industrial & Cotton Centennial Exposition (LA) 1884. 40 shs. No.142. Red. Eagle with shields and a “NEW ORLEANS” banner. IU. VF+ details, with edge splits backed with archival paper at the top, but the eye appeal is still strong. Est. 200-400

VF+; Alaska United Gold Mining 1895 IC (numerous punch cancels) VF+; Continental Coal (PA) UU VF+; Lebanon Valley Smelting (NJ) 1885 IC VF+ Est. 40-60

692

Ashburton Coal (PA) May, 1865. 100 shs. No. 453. Coal train. Revenue affixed, canceled with company stamp. IU. VF+. A scarce, early and attractive coal certificate. Est. 60-90

693

Bucks County Coal (PA) 1857. 100 shs. No. 48. Coal miners. Indians. Raft. Red FIFTY. IC. VF, light stains in the central portions. Est. 40-60

694

Columbia Coal and Iron (PA) 1856. 100 shs. No. 16. Coal train and mills. Indian hunting deer. PA arms. Coal miners. By Bald Cousland - Baldwin, Bald & Cousland. IU. VF+. Light red transfer endorsement near the left center. Attractive and unusual. Est. 60-90

689 689

North American Land (PA) 1795. Philadelphia. 10 shs. #1920. Signed by Robert Morris as president and James Marshall as secretary. Counterfoil at left, on laid paper. The Morris signature is canceled and there is a small ink erosion hole at the base of the first “R” in “Robert.” Some minor edge nibbling at the top, otherwise VF. North American Land Company was created to develop and sell lands given by a grateful Congress to Robert Morris, signer of the Declaration of Independence, who was known as the “financier of the American Revolution.” The European aristocrats who were supposed to buy into this scheme never appeared, and even George Washington could not save Morris from debtor’s prison. Est. 300-500

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695

Greenwood Coal (PA) 1864. 45 shs. No. 82. Coal miners lean on cart. Coal train below. By American Bank Note. Revenue affixed, canceled with company stamp. IC. VF+. Nice Civil War coal certificate. Est. 60-90

696

Hartford Associated Coal (PA) Oct. 1865. 45 shs. No. 82. Coal miners. Wonderful coal mining vignette across the left end panel featuring a coal train, coal mill and conveyor ramps by J. O. Seymor & Co. Revenue affixed. IU. VF. Est. 60-90

697

Red Mountain Coal & Improvement (PA) 1864. 200 shs. No. 306. Coal train. Revenue stamp affixed, tied in by the company’s stamps. IU. VF+.Est. 60-90


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

698

Tombstone Mill & Mining (CT) Tombstone District, Pima County, Arizona. 1885. 9 shares. Indians. ABN. IU. Pinhole upper right. VF+. Est. 100-200

702

Mercantile Petroleum (PA) April 5, 1865. 150 shs. No. 184. Oil tower, tanks, barrels. Revenue affixed, tied in by the secretary’s stamp. IU. VF+. A lovely example of this scarce Venango County title. This cataloger does not recall seeing one previously. Issued just before the end of the Civil War. Est. 75-125

699 699

Union Mining of N. York. 1846. 10 shs. No. 115 of an issue of 5,000 shares. Black on white with numerous vignettes; George Washington, Martha Washington, alchemist, allegorical females and more. IU. VF. Est. 100-150

700

United States Steel $5000 bond. 1901. Black.Train, mills. Issued of Henry Phipps, good friend and partner of Andrew Carnegie. ABN. IC. VF+. Est. 75-125

703 703

Issued to James Hill and Signed by Him

Queen City Oil Company of Buffalo (NY) July 3, 1865. One share. No. 28. Oil tower, tanks, barrels. Revenue affixed, tied in by the company’s stamp. Signed by William G. Fargo as President. Buffalo was known as the “Queen City.” IU. VF+. William G. Fargo (1818-81) organized both American Express and Wells, Fargo & Co with his partner Henry Wells, and with his brother, James C. Fargo (1829-1915), who developed the concept of the traveler’s check. Est. 500-1000

701 701

Webster County Coal & Land (IA) 1895. 980 shs. No.5. Fancy black border all around. Issued to and signed on the back by James J. Hill. IC. VF, stained along the left border. While Hill’s autograph is occasionally encountered on proxy forms (priced well over $1,000) it is rarely seen on a stock certificate. The signature is bold and pleasing.James J. Hill was a Canadian-American railroad executive (1838-1916); known as the “Empire Builder” for laying the Great Northern Railway from St. Paul to Seattle. Est. 400-800

704 704

Roberts Petroleum Torpedo (PA) April 12, 1865. 1000 shs. No. 19. Oil tower, tanks, barrels. Exploding torpedo fractures rock below ground. Revenue affixed, tied in. IU. EF, small pinhole. Est. 500-900

Page 79


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

705

Maritime Shares. [6] American Barge Line SPECIMEN EF; American Dredging 1878 IC VF, stub stain; Similar 1929 VF+; Delta Canal (FL) UU EF; Arundel UU EF; Buffalo Dry Dock UU EF. Est. 80-120

706

American Express (NY) 1877. #19049. 65 shs. Brown underprint. Dog in circle, Safety & Dispatch. Signed by William Fargo, president and Alexander Holland. The Fargo signature is affected to some degree by the stamp cancel. VF+. Est. 100-150

707

American Express (NY) 1878. #677. 9 shs. Blue. Dog in circle. Safety & Dispatch” at the bottom of the circle. “CAPITAL STOCK 18,000 SHARES” in the left end panel. Signed by Henry Wells, James Fargo and Alexander Holland. Small body hole and some minor age toning, left. Trimmed into the left border a bit. Revenue stamp and red printed endorsement. VF+. Est. 60-90

708

American Salvage (NJ) 1917. 100 shs. No.467. Green. Gold seal. Red “SERIES A STOCK.” Under water salvage scene. IU. VF+, very choice for this popular issue which usually has some condition problems. Est. 125-250

709 709

Atlantic Steam Packet (SC) 1863. 1 Share. No.391. On blue paper. Steamship. Embossed seal at lower left that states “ATLANTIC STEAM PACKET COMPANY OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES.” IU. VF details, with a repair on the right side that is not distracting. Some light waterstains. Ships of this company ran the Union blockade. This was a risky, but highly profitable venture. This is the only “blockade runner” issue with the”CONFEDERATE STATES” imprint. Est. 500-1000

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710 710

International Mercantile Marine (NJ). 1906. 10 shs. Common Capital stock. Ornate border, stub reattached left. Signed by Philip A.S. Franklin as president. Even after news of the accident was recieved, Franklin was quoted as saying “We place absolute confidence in the Titanic. We believe the boat is unsinkable.”POC affect signature. VF. Est. 250-350

711

Merchants Despatch Transportation (NY) 350 shares, 1889, #22, signed by James C. Fargo as president and issued to James C. Fargo, who signs on verso. Stub remnant. Red pen cancel through signature on recto. VF+. Est. 60-90

712

Steamship Shares. [7] United States Lines, Inc. 1939 IC VF+; Pioneer Steamship 1913 IC VF+; Detroit & Cleveland Navigation 1927 IC VF+; International Mercantile Marine 1929 IC VF+; Chester River Steamboat UU EF; Centreville & Corsica River Steam Boat U VF+; Baltimore & Philadelphia Steamboat UU EF. Est. 50-75


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

716

Telegraphic Time (NY) 1885. 100 shs.No.5. Brown. Clock with hand full of lightning bolts, left. IU. VF+, with a few scattered rust stains. Est. 100-150

717

Louisiana Quartet. 1) Security Brewing (LA) 1894. New Orleans. 10 shares.Monogram, hops. 2) New Orleans Lightering & Wrecking (LA) 1867. New Orleans. $100 Capital stock. Sailing vessel unloading on to lighters (freight barges).EF. 3) United States & European Propelling Car (LA) 1873. New Orleans. $100 bond. Pelican, agricultural products. Some stains and ink erosion, else VF. 4) Louisiana Purchase Exposition Certificate of Attendance. 1904. Angels flank domed building. Gold and black. Minor stain, otherwise EF.[4] Est. 300-500

713 713

714

American DeForest Wireless Telegraph 1905. 10 shs. No. 14538. Green. Semi-nude female holding a sparking antenna, and cherub. Signed as president by Lee DeForest. IU. VF+, minor fold soil on the back only.Lee Deforest (1873-1961) was one of the most productive and controversial inventors of the 20th Century. Although he worked for several companies, including Western Electric, most of his life was spent as an independent inventor, for which he received over 180 patents. He is most known for his pioneering work with the vacuum tube, first as a detector of radio waves, then as an amplifier for long distance phone calls and finally as the major technology of the radio transmitter. He received an honorary Oscar in 1959 for his Phonofilm process, a way to make the movies talk. Est. 300-600

Signed by J.P. and Junius Morgan

American Portable Telephone of New York (NY) 1889. 50 shs.Gold seal. Eagle, center, Washington on horseback, steamer, all connected by wires. Signed by Henry Pope, co-founder of the Bell Telephone Company of New York. VF with some petty fold splits and fold soiling. Est. 150-250

718 718

St. Louis Bridge (IA) 1881. 5 shs. No.A353. Bridge over the Mississippi River. Issued to J. S. Morgan & Co., signed by J. S. Morgan at the bottom of the red printed aragraph added to the front of the certificate, and by J. P. Morgan as Trustee, near the left border. IC. VF, stains, left. J. S. Morgan & Co. was a merchant banking firm based in London and New York, founded by Junius Spencer Morgan, the father of J. P. Morgan. Est. 200-300

715 715

Rochester District Telegraph Stock (NY) 1883. No.2. 5,800 shs. Gold seal. Eagle. Telegraph poles, batteries and wires form an inner border. Telegraph messenger with envelope in hand. IU. VF. Small hole in the bottom margin. Some toning near the edges. Est. 250-500

Page 81


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

719 719

New York Quotation Company Stock Ticker, No. 2815. The mechanism is clean and bright, and appears to be complete. The metal base, 9” in diameter, is in good condition. The black paint and the words “NEW YORK QUOTATION” are original. The external metal bracket that holds the tape is present (these brackets are usually missing). The glass dome is new, but it is very close in height and diameter to the original, and the overall presentation is quite convincing. These early machines, used exclusively in the Wall Street area, are very rarely encountered today. Est. 3500-7000

WORLD BONDS & SHARES 720

721

Austro-Hungarian Rwy. Bozen Meraner Bahn. 100 Gulden shares. Tan with red seal at the bottom. Seven are decent VF or so, but have minor edge problems. Fourteen are tattered. Sold as is. [21] Est. 200-300 Belgium. 1-24) Compagnie International De Wagon Lits. 25 shares. Red with green undeprint. International provider of sleeping cars. VF+. 25-54) Societe Financiere des Caoutchoucs (Rubber). Shares. Tan. VF+. Est. 120-180

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722

China. Kwangttung. Small size, with 40/50/60 imperforate coupons left Blue border on tan with red seal. stiff paper, edge issues. [15] Est. 60-90

723

Germany. Bulk Lot of mostly 1919 German bonds Berlin; Bremen; Coblenz; Cologne; Dusseldorf; Frankfurt; Hamburg; Leipzig; Also Austria & Hungary. Some damaged, many with most coupons many VF. [38] Est. 150-250

724

German Bonds. Berlin. 1919: 400 marks(20); 1,000 marks(2); 5,000 marks(2): 1922: 20,000 marks(2); 100,000(12) seperate partial sheets of coupons. Some with edge damage, otherwise VF. [38] Est. 50-100


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

725

726

727 728

729

735

Serbia. Sarajevo. Brewery shares. 5 shares. 250 Dinar. Green. IC. [2] VF+. Est. 75-125

736

Serbia. Institut du Credit Naubien. 50 Franc Share. 1911. Green and tan. Woman with anvil and agricultural implements. IU. VF+ on average. Est. 150-250

737

Serbia. Shipping company. Felsobacskai Egyesult. 600 Dinar Shares. Green. UU. EF on average. [14] Est. 300-500

738

Norway. Shipping. Bechs Rederi. 200 Kr. Share. blue. VF+. [3] Est. 150-250

Serbia. Sarajevo. Brewery shares. 1 Share. 50 Dinar. Brown. IC. VF+, a bit rough at left edge of the blank portion that folds behind and serves to hold the coupons. [3] Est. 75-125

739

Russia. 1916 Short Term War Loan 5 1/2%. 100 Rbl. Brown and green. Most are quite nice, but about 10% have some condition problems. Sold as is, no returns. [800] Est. 300-500

Serbia. Sarajevo. Brewery shares. 1 Share. 50 Dinar. Brown. IC. VF+, a bit rough at left edge of the blank portion that folds behind and serves to hold the coupons. [5] Est. 150-250

740

Serbia. Sarajevo. Brewery shares. 1 Share. 50 Dinar. Brown. IC. VF+, a bit rough at left edge of the blank portion that folds behind and serves to hold the coupons. [5] Est. 150-250

741

Serbia. Sarajevo. Brewery shares. 1 Share. 50 Dinar. Brown. IC. VF+, a bit rough at left edge of the blank portion that folds behind and serves to hold the coupons. [5] Est. 150-250

742

Spain. La Hispano Suiza Fabrica de Automoviles 1916. Brown, Sophisticated woman with fur jacket and cap. Car in background. IC. VF+ Est. 200-300

743

Quartette of Foreign Car Manufacturers. 1) Daimler-Benz 500 R 4% 1942. Green.IU. EF 2) Minerva Motors (Belgium) 1929. Blue. Heads with helmets. IU. EF. 3) Volkswagenwerk 1966. 1000 Deutche Marks. Brown. Building. IC. EF. 4) Bayerische Motoren Werke 1942. 500 R. 4%. Brown. IU. EF. (4) Est. 150-250

Greece. 1-63) Greek Guaranteed 2 1/2% Gold Loan of 1898. 100 Pounds. Blue. Red stamp at center. Four statues. IC. VF+, rough right margins. 64-76) Bank of Thessalie. 1925. 25 shares. Yellow. IC. Greek male wearing helmet. 77-78) Port of Para/ One share. 1906. VF+. 78-82) Rodez Coal. 20 Pounds. 1912. Most VF+. [82] Est. 150-250 Greece. Privileged Company to Foster the Production of Currants. 1905. Blue. Share of 250 Francs. MAn and vines, left. Monogram and vines, right. Mostly VF+, but some missing corners or with other minor condition problems. Sold as is. No returns. [464} Est. 100-150

Mostly Russian Grouping. 1-54) Russian Imperial Government 1894. 500 Rbl. Most are quite nice, but a four or five have condition problems. 55-57) Similar. 100 Rbles. EF. 58) Orel-Witebsk 1894 4% 125 Rbl. EF. 59) Russian Imperial Government. 5% State Loan. 1906. 500 Francs. VF, rough, right. 60) Russian Imperial Government. 4 1/2% State Loan. 1909. 500 Francs. VF, rough along the bottom margin. Also included are four tattered Russian railway bonds, two Holdaway Motors (NV) share certificates, and a Sand Point Gravel (WA) 1927. [67] Est. 75-125

730

Imperial Russian Government. 10 year. 4%. 25,000 Rubles. Low serial number 00145. Imperial double headed eagle. Red and green. 10/120 imperforate coupons right. VF Est. 100-150

731

Imperial Russian Government. 10 year. 4%. 25,000 Rubles. Low serial number 00057. Imperial double headed eagle. Red and green. 10/120 imperforate coupons right. VF Est. 100-150

732

Imperial Russian Government. 10 year. 4%. 25,000 Rubles. Low serial number 00008, and other, under 400, but damaged. . Imperial double headed eagle. Red and green. coupons right. Fine [5]Est. 200-300

733

734

Imperial Russian Government. 10 year. 4%. 5,000 Rubles. mostly very low serial numbers 0000(6-9); 000(15-18). Imperial double headed eagle. Red underprint 5000 on tan. 24/120 imperforate coupons right. VF, 3 with minor edge problems. [10] Est. 100-150

IC – Issued Cancelled IU – Issued Uncancelled UU – Unissued Uncancelled

Imperial Government of Russia. 1894 4%. 100 Rbl. Tan under print. Two thirds of these bonds are EF. Must be seen. Sold as is. [500] Est. 400-600

Page 83


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

CONFEDERATE CURRENCY

747 744 744

CSA. T-5. $100. 1861. Cr.5, PF-1. No. 2807. Hudson River railroad scene. Minerva. Green Cs and HUNDRED. Full borders all around, though the margin is tight, lower left. There is a small rust spot above “Two years.” Virtually Uncirculated but punch canceled. Excellent color, sharpness, and paper quality. Est. 750-1250

747

CSA. T-10. $10. 1861. Cr.36, PF-16. No.72307. Liberty with eagle and CSA flag. Small 10 upper left. “for” written. Fine, with borders all around, though the margin is tight, lower right. There is a small rust spot above “Two years.” Boldly printed with excellent detail for this issue and grade. Est. 600-900

748

CSA. T-29. $10. 1861. Negro picking cotton. Fine, mounting remnants, minor edge splits. COC. Est. 60-90

749

CSA. T-39. $100. 1862. Cr.293, PF-4. No.9069. Train with all white steam. Savannah and Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Borders complete. Est. 100-150

750

CSA. T-39. $100. 1862. Cr.291, PF-9. No.18755. Train with all white steam. Richmond interest paid stamp. Almost Uncirculated. Four clear margins. Est. 80-120

751

CSA. T-39. $100. 1862. Cr.294, PF-13. No.22514. Train with all white steam. Plain interest paid stamp. Fine. Est. 80-120

752

CSA. T-40. $100. 1863. No.69042. Train with diffused steam. Three Jackson interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Est. 100-150

753

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.315A, PF-10. No.433071. Slaves hoeing cotton. Plain paper. Two Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Tight lower left. Est. 100-150

754

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.315A, PF-10. No.127971. Slaves hoeing cotton. Plain paper. “Issued March 10, 1863 by A. D. Cazaux Cap’t & A. Q. M. 18th Reg’t. A. C. T.” on back. Fine detail, but there are pieces out of the top border. Est. 60-90

755

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.317A, PF-12. No.43366. Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA block watermark. Two Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Small red stain at the top center. Tight lower right. Est. 100-150

745 745

CSA. T-7. $100. 1861. Cr.11, PF-4. No.5364. Plate C. Choice VF-EF, with excellent paper quality and four full margins. Appearance of Uncirculated at first glance. Est. 750-1250

746 746

CSA. T-9. $20. 1861. Cr. 31, PF-12. No. 4945. Plate D. Small XX. Sailing Ship. PCGS Gem New 66 PPQ. For those who only demand the very best. Worthy of a world class CSA note registry set. Est. 1000-1500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

756

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.319A, PF-11. No.32757. Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA script watermark. Savannah and Augusta interest paid stamps. Choice AU. Four clear margins, the top margin with a few tiny nicks. Est. 100-150

757

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.319A, PF-11. No.65476. Small “a” under elongated “A.” Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA script watermark. Three Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Four clear margins. Est. 100-150

758

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.317A, PF-12. No.43371. Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA block watermark. Two Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Small red stain at the top center. Four clear margins, bent corner tips. Est. 100-150

759

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.317A, PF-12. No.43340 Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA block watermark. Two Augusta interest paid stamps. Uncirculated. Small body hole, right. Four clear margins, bent corner tip. Est. 100-150

760

CSA. T-41. $100. 1862. Cr.317A, PF-12. No.20470 Slaves hoeing cotton. CSA block watermark. Three Augusta interest paid stamps. Choice AU. Four clear margins. Est. 100-150

763 763

CSA. T-56. $100. 1863. Cr.403, PF-1. No. 1765. 1st Series. Lucy Pickens. Soldier, left. Full borders all around. Unc. with a tiny trace of teller handling. Exceptional color and freshness. Est. 250-350

764 764

CSA. T-64. $500. 1864. Cr.489B, PF-3. No.35633. Plate B. Dark red. A lovely VF-EF example with rarely seen full margins. Est. 750-1250

765

CSA. CT-65/491. $100. 1864. No. 445216. The so-called “Havana counterfeit.” Lucy Pickens. Soldier, left. Misaligned back. EF detail, wet paper wrinkles, some age toning present, and a small edge split. Est. 50-75

766

CSA. T-68. $10. 1864. Cr.549, PF-31. No. 24367. 7 Series. Horses pull canon. Margins all around. Unc. Est. 50-75

767

CSA. XX-1/C1. Back F. $20. 1861. No. 4176. Red. “Female Riding Deer.” Green back with XXs. Light pencil notation. Fine-VF. Est. 100-150

768

CSA. XX-1/C1. Back C. $20. 1861. No. 4089. Orange. “Female Riding Deer.” Green back with TWENTY at the center. Fine+. Est. 100-105

769

CSA. XX-1/C1. Back C. $20. 1861. No. 5010. Orange. “Female Riding Deer.” Green back with TWENTY at the center. Fine details, tear, with a few minor pin holes. Est. 60-90

770

CSA. XX-1/C1. Back H. $20. 1861. No. 4952. Green. “Female Riding Deer.” Green back with slaves and cotton wagon. Light pencil notation. About Fine. Est. 100-150

761 761

762

CSA. T-44. $1. 1862. Cr. 341, PF-3. No. 36980. Third Series. Steamship. Lucy Pickens. Decent borders all around, as these were printed with little or no space between the notes on the sheets. Uncirculated, with a light paper wrinkle as made. Most notes from this series were heavily circulated. Est. 350-450 CSA. T-44. $1. 1862. Cr. 341, PF-3. No. 50878. Third Series. Steamship. Lucy Pickens. Hs the appearance of Almost Uncirculated, but trimmed into the borders in a few places, and there is a light stain on the right border line. Pencil notation on back. A small repair is visible in the right border. Est. 100-150

Page 85


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

771

772

CSA. CT-66/501. $50. 1864. No. 73315. Jefferson Davis. EF-AU. Misaligned back. Four solid margins. Very light age spot in the left border, not distracting. Est. 100-150

782

LA. Pointe Coupee. Parish of Pointe Coupee. 5 Cents. March 24, 1862. No.1280. On tan paper. Train in oval. Red FIVE CENTS. AU. Full margins, but trimmed a bit close at the top right. Est. 75-125

OBSOLETE BANKNOTES

783

LA. Pointe Coupee. Parish of Pointe Coupee. 25 Cents.

AR. Helena. Real Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas. $5. 1839. Farm family. Arms, lower right. Fine details, but there is a small body hole and a few pin holes. Est. 75-125

773

AR-LA. Little Rock - New Orleans. Real Cincinnati & Little Rock Slate Co. $1. 1854. Red ONE. Miners. Liberty seated with shield. VF-EF, with small fold splits. Est. 75-125

774

DC. Washington. Columbia Bank. $10. 1852. (DC195 G8a). Red TEN. Three women. Partially prepared, unissued. VF+. Minor erosion hole through the date. Looks AU at a glance. Est. 60-90

775

DC. Washington. Columbia Bank. $20. 1852. (DC195 G10a). Red TWENTY. Three women. Partially prepared, unissued. VF+. Looks AU at a glance. Est. 75-125

776

LA. Alexandria. Parish of Rapides. $5. Feb. 8, 1862. No. 8702. Train in oval. Red “FIVE DOLLARS.” VF-EF. Trimmed close to the borders and there is a small corner tip missing. just to the border at left. Est. 75-125

777

LA. Bellevue. Parish of Bossier. $5. July 1, 1862. No.61. Fancy scroll work above “TREASURER.” Very light pen cancel. Excellent margins and paper quality. Printed on the backs of drafts. VF-EF, appearance of Uncirculated at first glance.Est. 150-250

778

LA. Harrisonburg. Parish of Catahoula. $5. March 25, 1862. No.29. Devil’s heads and fancy scroll work over the title. Printed on tan paper. Fine details, some repairs. Sold as is. Popular and becoming elusive. Est. 100-150

779

LA. Plaquemine. Parish of Iberville. 50 Cents. Jan. 20, 1862. No.875. Indian princess, left. Ornate back. VF-EF. Full, generous margins all around. Est. 75-125

780

LA. Plaquemine. Parish of Iberville. “100 Cents.” April 15, 1863. No.127. All green. Wheat below. Choice VF. Lovely full margins. Est. 75-125

781

LA. Plaquemine. Parish of Iberville. $3. March 15, 1862. No.757. Green tint and back. Eagle. Pelicans, left. VF-EF. Decent margins. Est. 75-125

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March 24, 1862. No.1746. On tan paper. Long train. Blue “Twenty-Five Cts.” AU. Three full margins, trimmed just to the border at left. Est. 50-75

784

LA. Pointe Coupee. Parish of Pointe Coupee. $1. March 24, 1862. No.2518. Farm implements. Ceres, left. Green ONE.. EF-AU. Full margins, stain near the center of the bottom margin. Est. 75-125

785 785

LA. Parish of St. Charles. 50 Cents. April 1, 1862. No.348. Blue “10” and “20” counters on the front (as this note was printed over previously used bank notes). VF-EF. Clear but narrow margins all around. Est. 250-350

786

LA. Parish of St. John the Baptist. $1. March 25, 1862. No.1466. Ceres and agricultural implements. Green ONE. AU. Fresh and bright. Clear but narrow margins all around. Est. 100-150

787

LA. Parish of St. John the Baptist. $1. March 25, 1862. No.1472. Ceres and agricultural implements. Green ONE. EF-AU. Fresh and bright. Clear but narrow margins all around. Est. 100-150

788

LA. Parish of St. John the Baptist. $1. March 25, 1862. No.1470. Ceres and agricultural implements. Green ONE. VF-EF. Fresh and bright. Clear but narrow margins all around. Est. 75-125

789

LA. Parish of St. John the Baptist. $3. March 31, 1862. No. 498. Ceres and agricultural implements. Red THREE. Printed over New Orleans bank drafts. VF but looks much better. Fresh and bright. Full margins all around. Est. 75-125

790

LA. Vidalia. Parish of Concordia. $2. April 15, 1862. No.1734. Green tint. Red back. Cotton bales. Woman with spear, left. EF-AU. Light age tone throughout. Nice margins all around. Est. 75-125


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

791

LA. Vidalia. Parish of Concordia. $20. Dec. 2, 1862. no.1902. Red denominations. Green back. Woman and angel. Unissued. EF-AU, looks better. Full margins. Est. 75-125

792

LA. Vidalia. Parish of Concordia. $20. Dec. 2, 1862. Red denominations. Green back. Woman and angel. Unissued. Unc, minor teller handling. Est. 100-150

793

MD. Salisbury. Somerset and Worcester Savings Bank. $2. November 1, 1862. Green. Milkmaid and cows. Unc. Est. 100-150

794

MI. Mt. Clemens. Pair of Bank of Macomb County Obsoletes. 1) $1. (MI MOU-1-10). Problem-free for grade with “Dav. Preston and Co.” stamp on back. VG.<B>$5. (MI MOU-1-27). REMAINDER. HINGES AT TOP BACK CHOICE AU. [2] Est. 100-150

795

MI. Pontiac. Clinton Canal Bank. $2. December 9, 1887. (MI-325 G4) DeWitt Clinton. Unc. Est. 75-125

796

MO. Jefferson City. State of Missouri. $1. January 1, 1862. Cr.13. Jefferson Davis, flags. Vivid cherry red ONE. Very deeply embossed and boldly printed. An exceptional example of this issue, Uncirculated. Est. 150-250

797

MO. Jefferson City. State of Missouri. $20. January 1, 1863. Cr.20. Trimmed into the sides, otherwise Unc. Est. 100-150

798

NJ. Camden. Camden Bank. $3. PROOF on India paper. (NJ-60 G6). Full orange tint. Foundry. Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. ABN rubber stamp on back. One of the punch cancels has been carefully repaired, and the note appears to be pristine from the front. Est. 150-250

799

800

NJ. Freehold. Freehold Banking Co. $2. PROOF on India paper. Oxen pull wagon. Ceres, boy, left. Woman, right. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. One of the punch cancels is enlarged, and there are some wrinkles, as made, otherwise Uncirculated. ABN rubber stamp. Est. 150-250 NJ. Freehold. Freehold Banking Co. $10. PROOF on India paper. Woman with sword and eagle. Train, left. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. ABN rubber stamp. A short split extends from one of the punch cancels but is not distracting. The upper right margin is uneven. Uncirculated. Est. 120-180

801 801

NJ. Freehold. Freehold Banking Co.$100. PROOF on India paper. Male portrait. Shield flanked by Minuteman and liberty. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. ABN rubber stamp. There is a small spot visible from the back only, othewise Uncirculated. Uncirculated. Est. 200-300

802

NJ. Hoboken. Hoboken Banking. 1826. Uncut sheet. $1-1-2-3. The first pair with Franklin; the $2 with a river goddess, and the last with a queen on a throne. Partially prepared with dates in ink. Minor erosion and age toning. Est. 100-150

803

NJ. Millville. Millville Bank. $1. PROOF on India paper. (NJ-305 G2). Glass blowers. Bald, Cousland. Choice Uncirculated. Light ABN rubber stamp on the back, with minor bleed through on to the front. Formerly Lot 3867 in Smythe’s September 2005 auction. Est. 150-250

804

NJ. Newton. Sussex Bank. $1. PROOF on India paper. (G10a). Red ONE. Farm family and haystack. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. ABN rubber stamp. Choice Uncirculated. Est. 200-300

805

NJ. Newton. Sussex Bank. $5. PROOF on India paper. (G38). Woman reclininging, mills in distance. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland. Choice Uncirculated. Moderate ABN rubber stamp on the back. Est. 300-450

806

NJ. Newton. Sussex Bank. 1-2) Uncut partial sheet. $2. Women, eagle and shield. $3. Franklin. Both Unc. 3) $50. Ceres. Unc. All three are unissued. Est. 80-120

807

Page 87


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

807

NJ. Orange. Orange Bank. $5. PROOF on India paper. (NJ-405 G24a). Full orange tint, and large “V” outlined in orange. Farm family, left. Baldwin, Bald & Cousland - Bald, Cousland. There are two very minor splits at the punch cancels that don’t extend to the edges, otherwise Choice Uncirculated. No ABN rubber stamp. Est. 250-350

808

NJ. Paterson. Peoples’ Bank of Paterson. $7. Cow. Washington. Marshall. AU. Nice centering. Est. 60-90

809

NJ. Plainfield. Union County Bank. 1859. Uncut sheet. $1-1-2-3. . Red overprints. The top notes with a woman reclining near a shield; farm family and horse on the $2. Woman near column on the $3. AU, with some paper wrinkling as made. Est. 200-300

810

New Jersey Duo.1) Egg Harbor Bank. $1. (NJ-115 G2a) ABN. Dogs chasing stag. Red overprint ONE. Fine. 2) Sussex Bank. $1. (NJ-390 G10a) Haystack. Red ONE. Unc.[2] Est. 60-90

811

NY. New York. Butchers & Drovers Bank. 50 Cents. (H981)1862. Merchants scrip. Dog and safe. Hatch & Co. AU, POC. Est. 20-30

812

NC. Fayetteville. Bank of Fayetteville. $2. (NC-15 G4b) Horses pulling covered wagon. Indian. Large red overprint TWO. Fine. Est. 60-90

813

NC. Wadesborough. Bank of Wadesborough. $4. August 1, 1892. (NC-80 G8a) Hunters stoking fire. Red-orange overprint FOURs, and 4s. ABN. Fine. Est. 100-150

Desirable Texas Obsolete Collection

818 818

819 819

814

PA. Warren. North Western Bank. $5. Red FIVE. Cattle. George Washington, left. Outstanding product of National Bank Note Company, and rarely found fully issued and this nice. Choice Uncirculated. Est. 100-150

815

PA. Warren. Lumbermens Bank of Warren. $10. PA665 G20 (PA-425 6). German text. Unissued remainder. Cameos of Mozart, Labater.AU. Est. 75-125

816

Pair of Northern Scrip Notes. 1)PA. Borough of Stroudsburg. 10 Cents.1863. Remainder. Trimmed close, otherwise Unc. 2) Corporation of the Village of Rondout. 25 Cents. 1862. Blue. Fine.[2] Est. 30-50

817

SC. Charleston. State Bank of South Carolina. $5. May 12, 1860. (SC-40 G22a) Bank branch vignette. Red overprint block FIVE. AU. Est. 50-75

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Texas.San Felipe De Austin. Treasurer of the Provisional Government of Texas. $60. March 2, 1836. Cr.P1. No.445. Handwritten on pink paper. VF detail, but split along folds, and backed. A rare and important example of very early Texas fiscal paper. Without the splits and backing it would be valued somewhere in the $4,000-$5,000 range. Est. 3000-4500

Texas. Velasco. Government of Texas. $45.00. 1836. Cr.V2. No.586. Sphinx in left end panel. Plate A. VF with some bleed through from the back endorsements. Trimmed into the top border. Rarity 9 per Shull. A nicer example recently brought $546.50 at auction. You may not see another example offered for several years. Est. 250-350

820 820

Texas. Columbia. Republic of Texas. $48.00. 1836. Cr.C2A. No.1674. Three ornate borders. Printed “183_.” “Captain Burnett’s Company.” Signed by Paymaster and Paymaster General. VF-EF, an edge split near the lower left corner is neatly repaired with archival tape. Not cancelled. A very nice piece of Texas military history. Est. 200-300


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Unlisted Variety

824

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $12. 1837. Cr.HW1A. No.3029. Handwritten. Fine, CC. Fold splits. Est. 75-125

825

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $72.00. 1837. Cr.HW3. No.1979. Ornate borders. Printed “183_.” Military service. Signed by Auditor only. F-VF, light pen cancel. Trimmed just into the borders. Stains. Est. 60-90

826

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $368.33. 1837. Cr.HW3A. No.2462. Ornate left border with rosettes on each side of the flowers. Military service. Signed by Auditor only. Fine, stains. Est. 80-120

821 821

Texas. Columbia. Republic of Texas. $48.00. 1836. Similar to Cr.C2D. No.1873. Three ornate borders. Printed “183_.” “Prices Company.” “TELEGRAPH” in the left border. “THIS CERTIFICATE” in solid black letters, “COLUMBIA” is printed, and the bottom border has a break between rosettes. Signed only by the Paymaster General. VF-EF. Not cancelled. Fresh and crisp, but there are some stains. Est. 200-300

Signed by Valentine Bennett 827 827

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $30. 1837. Cr.HW4A. No.6612. Ornate borders. Printed “183_.” Military service. “HOUSTON” and “AUDITOR” in large plain black letters. Unc, pen canceled. Some light age toning is present. Trimmed just into the borders. Scarcer type. Est. 150-250

828

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $1,019.57. 1837. Cr.HW4-1. No.5237. Ornate borders. Printed “183_.” Military service. “1st” written before Auditor. “Credit 600 36/100” written across front. VF-EF, CC, stamp hinges on back. Trimmed just to the borders. Scarcer type. Est. 100-150

829

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $75.00. 1837. Cr.HW4B. No.4304. Ornate borders. Printed “183_.” Military service. VF-EF, CC, stamp hinges on back, light stain, right. Trimmed just into the borders. Scarcer type. Est. 175-250

830

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $48.00. 1837. Cr.HW4B. No.4389. Ornate borders. Printed “183_.” Military service. “1st” Auditor. VF, light pen cancel. Trimmed just into the borders, and a small corner tip is missing. Est. 100-150

831

Texas. Houston. Republic of Texas. $56.00. 1837. Cr.HW9A. No.4263. Four decorative borders. “Houston” in script letters. VF-EF. Pen cancel. Nice for the grade. Est. 100-150

822 822

Texas. Columbia. Republic of Texas. $20.00. 1837. Cr.C5A. No.1034. Four ornate borders. Printed “183_.” For military service. Made out to Valentine Bennett and signed by him. Bennett was in the battles of Gonzales, Concepcion, San Jacinto, and in the seige of Bexar. VF, minor age toning. Est. 500-750

823 823

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $40. 1837. Cr.HW1A. No.5077. Handwritten. Almost Uncirculated, and very lightly canceled. Some minor stains and age toning is present. Est. 200-300

Page 89


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

832

Texas. Houston. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. $78.93. 1838. Cr.HW10. No.9549. Ornate borders. AU. Small body hole hole near “E” in “TREASURER.” Not cancelled. Trimmed just to the borders. Est. 100-150

833

Texas. Houston. Republic of Texas. 1839. Cr.HW12. “Intelligencer Print” in the left border. Unissued remainder with the stub prepared and still attached. EFAU. Est. 75-150

837 837

Texas. Houston. Government of Texas. $50. 1839. Cr.H21A. No.904. Woman with scales, ship. Man with flag, left. Bright, boldly printed. Four excellent margins. VF, CC, with three minor pinholes and a very light water stain, barely visible from the back. Est. 300-500

838

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $1. 1841. Cr.A1. No.6102. Ceres seated. Indian, left. VF, CC, with one or two minor pinholes. Trimmed just into the right end panel. Est. 250-350

839

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $1. 1841. Cr.A1. No.5457. Ceres seated. Indian, left. VG-Fine, CC. Trimmed close, upper right. Some age toning. Est. 150-250

840

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $1. 1840. Cr.A1. No.3556. Ceres. Indian, left. VG, CC. Minor soiling on both sides. Est. 150-250

834 834

Texas. Houston. Government of Texas. $10. 1839. Cr.H17. No.1018. Maiden leans on broken column. Steamboat, left. Almost Uncirculated, CC. Four full borders, but tight at the bottom. Est. 250-350

835 835

Texas. Houston. Government of Texas. $10. 1839. Cr.H17. No.1425. Maiden leans on broken column. Steamboat, left. VF-EF, CC. Four full margins. Est. 275-350 841 841

836 836

Texas. Houston. Government of Texas. $10. 1839. Cr.H17. No.2063. Maiden with tools. Maiden leans on broken column. Steamboat, left. Four full margins. Signed “Sam Houston.” (Secretarial signature.) Est. 275-350

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Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $5. 1841. Cr.A4. No.3868. Indian contemplates ruins. Large 5s. Red back. VF, CC. Wonderful color and very nice paper quality. There are three initials in blue ink under “REPUBLIC” and a little nick in the bottom margin, but hardly distracting. Est. 250-350


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

845

842 842

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $5. 1841. Cr.A4. No.2524. Indian contemplates ruins. Large 5s. Red back. Technically Fine, CC, but has the appearance of a higher grade. Est. 250-350

845

843 843

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $10. 1840. Cr.A5. No.5929. Jupiter, left. Red five-pointed star on back. VF, CC. Trimmed into the top only. Est. 300-450

846 846

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $20. 1840. Cr.A6. No.1479. Indian, left. Red five-pointed star on back. Almost Uncirculated in overall appearance, CC. Four full margins. There are penned initials on the front, and an ink stain on the back, but still quite attractive. Est. 200-300

847

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $50.00. 1840. Cr.AW2. No.64. Simple borders. “Whiting’s Press” in left border. 2nd Auditor. Issued to R. C. Todd. VFEF. Pen cancel, some bleed through from the back endorsement. Consignor’s research indicates that Todd may have been killed by Kiowa Indians near Camp Resolution, Quitaque, Texas on the date this was issued. Est. 100-150

844 844

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $20. 1839. Cr.A6. No.3039. Indian, left. Red five-pointed star on the back. Technically VF-EF, but looks Almost Uncirculated, CC. Trimmed close at the sides. The paper quality is excellent for the most part. Est. 250-350

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $20. 1840. Cr.A6. No.2087. Indian with bow, left. Red five-pointed star on back. Almost Uncirculated, CC. Trimmed into the top, but the paper quality is excellent and the overall eye-appeal is strong. Est. 250-350

848 848

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $400.00. 1841. Cr.AW2. No.220. Simple borders.”Whiting’s Press” in left border. 2nd Auditor. VF-EF. Pen cancel. Issued to Sam Whiting, the printer of these notes. Est. 150-250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

849

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas.$24. 1840. Cr.AW2-1. No.370. Simple borders. “Whiting’s Press” in left border. 1st Auditor, no period after “Gov’t.” VF. Pen cancels. Est. 100-150

855

Texas. Austin. Treasurer of the State of Texas. $5. 1862. Cr.15D. No.7539. “Approved” on third line. No letter Q. Circular red “REGISTERED 1867” stamp. Appearance of a VF example, but there are numerous repaired splits, and stains on back. Est. 100-150

856

Texas. Austin. State of Texas Treasury Warrant. $10. 1862. Cr.18A. No.76672. Red tint. Sailing ship. “Milty” written over printed “Civil.” VF-EF. Small portion of a stamp hinge on the back. Not cancelled. Est. 60-90

857

Texas. Austin. State of Texas Treasury Warrant. $20. March 3, 1865. Cr.26A. No.45913. Green left end panel with “TWENTY.” Green back. “Six” written in red over printed “EIGHT.” AU. Some ink bleed from the back endorsement. Not cancelled. Est. 60-90

858

VA. Corporation of Winchester. $5. January 1, 1862. Men with cattle. VF, two inconsequential pinholes. Est. 150-250

859

VA. Howardsville. Bank of Howardsville. $20. July 8, 1861. (VA-105 G18a) Henry Clay. Fancy green overprint TWENTY and 20s Fine. Est. 60-90

860

VA. Richmond. $1. Virginia Treasury Note. May 15, 1862. No. 44995. Woman seated. Man in oval. Red ONE. Scarcer date. Fine. Est. 30-50

861

Currency Trio. [3] 1) Fr. 1379. 50 Cents. Dexter. CU. 2) Fr. 1380. 50 Cents. Crawford. CU. 3) State of Mississippi. $20, 186-. Cr.48. Fine, pin hole. Est. 75-125

862

Paper Money Potpourri. [38] Continental Currency - 1776 Half Dollar. VG. 1-7) Fractional Currency 4th and 5th issue assortment. All G-VG with spots, stains, pin holes. 8) Jersey City 10 Cent obsolete. Fair. 9-33) Assorted World Notes - WW II Japanese, Chinese, German inflation money. 34-36) Canada - $1 1937 VF; $2 1937 EF; $1 1954 VF. 37-38) CSA $10 1864 VF; $50 1864 Fair, torn in two, pieces out. Est. 75-125

850 850

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $25.00. 1841. Cr.AW3A. No.900. Simple borders. “TWENTYFIVE DOLLARS.” Script “N” in “Navy.” VF-EF. Minor stain, left. Upper right corner is trimmed in a bit. Not cancelled. Est. 100-150

851

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $25.00. 1841. Cr.AW3. No.75. Simple borders. “TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS.” Block “N” in “Navy.” Uncirculated, neatly cut canceled. Four generous margins. Est. 120-180

852

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $25.00. 1841. Cr.AW3A. No.20. Simple borders. “TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS.” Script “N” in “Navy.” “The last Navy appropriation…” Fine, CC, four stamp hinges on back. Full margins. Est. 100-150

853

854

Texas. Austin. Republic of Texas. $82.27. 1845. Cr.AW9B. M16. No.2931. Four leaf-like borders. EFAU. Manuscript “Paid” across center, A higher grade example of this Rarity 6 issue. Est. 150-250 Texas. Washington. Treasurer of the Republic of Texas. Treasurer’s Warrant. $95.00. 1843. Cr.W4. No.846. Large ornamental design, “TEXIAN PRINT,” “Washington” left end panel. Ornate borders. VF-EF. Three generous margins. “Paid” Written neatly on front. Est. 175-250

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

THIRD SESSION Wednesday, May 22, 2013- 3:00 p.m. Lots 863-1277 Spink Smythe, New York

FEDERAL CURRENCY

867

Fr.60. $2. Legal Tender. No.E17162747A. Plate C. AU.

1917. Jefferson. Est. 150-250

868

Fr.82. $5. Legal Tender. 1880. No. A52088500. Plate D. Woodchopper. PCGS VF35 PPQ. Est. 200-300

863 863

864

Fr.16. $1. Legal Tender. 1862. Salmon Chase. No.79588. Plate D. VF, with a 3/8” top edge tear at the center crease. VF detail. A few pinholes at the upper left and upper right. Bright and attractive, with vivid red ink. Trimmed close Tight margins as often found on this issue. Est. 400-600

869 869

Fr.87. $5. Legal Tender. 1907. Andrew Jackson. No.E18658431. Plate C. AU. There is some teller handling, but strong embossing attests to the originality of this note. Est. 250-350

870

Fr.91. $5. Legal Tender. No.K53678013. Plate E. Woodchopper with the “PCBLIC” error on back. VF-EF. Est. 150-250

Large Size Legal Tender Pair. 1) Fr.38. $1. 1917. Fine. 2) Fr. 91 $5. 1907. Fine. Est. 100-150

865 865

Fr.43. $2. Legal Tender. 1875. No.B8053396. Plate D. EF-AU, but the left margin has been trimmed. Est. 750-1250

871 871

Fr.122. $10. Legal Tender. 1901. No. E60145579. Plate C. Bison. Fine, one unobtrusive pin hole. Est. 400-600

866 866

Fr.53. $2. Legal Tender. 1880. No.A1298303. Plate C. Fine, minor repaired edge splits. Est. 1000-1500

Page 93


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Attractive Martha Washington

875 872 872

875

Fr.219. $1. Silver Certificate. 1886. Martha Washington. Large brown seal .No.B55290628. Plate D. Very Choice AU, with only one center fold keeping it from a Gem CU. Wide margins on all four sides. This example has the appearance of an Uncirculated note when viewed from the front. Est. 1000-1500

Fr.246. $2. Silver Certificate. 1891. No. E14491193. Plate A. Windom. PCGS VF 20. Est. 400-600

Very Pleasing “Chief ”

876 876

Fr.280. $5. Silver Certificate. 1899. No. N21559900. Plate D. Chief. PCGS Choice About New 55 Apparent - Minor Edge Restoration Edge Trimmed. Est. 1200-1800

877

Fr.280. $5. Silver Certificate. 1899. No. N16524385. Plate A. Chief. Fine. The back is shifted close to the top, the front has less of a shift. Est. 500-750

873 873

Fr.242. $2. Silver Certificate. 1886. Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock. No.B11231900. Plate D. VF-EF and perhaps better, with subliminal vertical folds, corner creases, and some very light dirt on the front at the far right. Good margins. Est. 750-1250

874 874

Fr.245. $2. Silver Certificate. 1891. Sec. of the Treasury William Windom. No.E6544197. Plate A. EF, with good margins. Est. 400-600

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878 878

Fr.281. $5. Silver Certificate. 1899. No. N45992982. Plate F. Chief. PCGS About New 50. Est. 1500-2000


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Impressive “SILVER” Back $20

879 879

Fr.282. $5. Silver Certificate. 1923. No. A3766201B. Plate E. Porthole. PCGS About New 55. Est. 2000-3000

883 883

Fr.309. $20. Silver Certificate. 1880. Capt. Stephen Decatur. “SILVER” back. No.B592373. Plate A. PCGS Very Fine 25 Apparent Minor Edge Restoration. Est. 3000-5000

880 880

Fr.282. $5. Silver Certificate. 1923. No.A3782071B. Plate G. VF. Just a bit of light soil on the top and bottom margins on the back. Est. 1000-1500

High Quality “Porthole” 881

884 884

Fr.282. $5. Silver Certificate. 1923. No. A3177041B. Plate A. Porthole. Fine or better detail, but there are several small edge splits. Still quite attractive. Est. 300-450

Fr.320. $20. Silver Certificate. 1891. Daniel Manning, Treasury Secretary (1885-1887). No.79588. Plate D. Choice VF. Est. 1500-2500

Lovely “SILVER” Back $10

885 885

Fr.351. $1. Treasury Note. 1891. No. B47560462. Plate B. Stanton. PCGS VF 25. Est. 300-500

886

Fr.351. $1. Treasury Note. 1891. Edwin Stanton, Sec. of War (1862-65, 1865-68). No.B22945831. Plate C. EF. Est. 350-0

887

Fr.352. $1. Treasury Note. 1891. Edwin Stanton, Sec. of War (1862-65, 1865-68). No.B53966291. Plate C. VF. Est. 150-250

882 882

Fr.287. $10. Silver Certificate. 1880. Robert Morris, a signatory of the Declaration of Independence. “SILVER” back. No.B2136003. Plate C. PCGS Very Fine 30 Apparent Minor Restoration. Lower margin is narrow near the lower left corner. Est. 2000-3000

Page 95


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

888 888

Fr.1173. $10. Gold Certificate. 1922. Michael Hillegas, first Treasurer of the United States. Large serial numbers: H79313514. Plate F. EF-AU. Est. 400-600

889

Pair of Large Size $10 Gold Certificates. [2] Fr.1173. Both VF, one with light soil on the back. Est. 100-150

890

Another Pair of Large Size $10 Gold Certificates. [2] Fr.1173. Both Fine. Est. 200-300

894 894

Fr.1215. $100. Gold Certificate. 1922. “Old Bullion” — Thomas Hart Benton, Missouri Senator (1821-51) and member of the House of Representatives (1853-55). No.N646610. Plate B. VF-EF. Est. 1200-1800

895 895

Fr.1099. $100. Cleveland. Large-size Federal Reserve Note. 1914. No.D542672A. Plate D. AU. Est. 800-1200

896

Large Size 1914 Federal Reserve Note Grouping. 1) Fr.847C. $5. Fine. 2) Fr.851C. $5. Fine, small edge split. 3) Fr. 911B. $10. Fine. 4-6) Fr. 911C. $10. Fine; Fine with fold soil; VF 7) Fr. 934. $10. Fine. Est. 100-150

897

Mostly Lower Grade Large Size Federal Assortment. [6] 1) $1 1891 Silver Certificate. Good. 2) $1 1899 Silver Certificate. Fine, but stains and a bald spot. 3) $1 1923 Silver Certificate. VF-EF. 4-6) $10 1922 Gold Certificates. Fine detail, but stained; Fine, spots; Fine, small spot. Est. 200-300

898

Group of Miscellaneous Federal Notes. 1) $2 1917 Legal Tender. About Fine, stains, edge splits. 2) $2 1899 Silver Certificate. Soiled VG. Edge splits. 3-11) $1 1957 Silver Certificates. Average circulated. 12) $2 1928F Legal Tender. Fine. 13) $2 1953A Legal Tender. About Fine, stains. Est. 150-250

899

Small Size Legal Tender Grouping. [10] $2 1928B VF; $2 1953* VF; $2 1953A(2) both EF; $2 1953B(2) Fine, VF; $2 1953C Fine, pencil; $2 1963(2) Fine, EF; $5 1953C Fine. Est. 50-75

891 891

Fr.1187. $20. Gold Certificate. 1922. No. K85817794. Plate B. Choice AU. Est. 400-600

892

Pair of Large Size $20 Gold Certificates. [2] Fr.1187. Both Fine, but one has a nibbled margin. Est. 150-250

Attractive High Denomination Gold Certificate

893 893

Fr.1197. $50. Gold Certificate. 1882. Silas Wright, NY Senator (1833-44) and Governor (1845-47). No.H432602. Plate B. Choice VF. Excellent color. Est. 2000-3000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

900

$1 Small Silver Certificate Grouping. [17]1928A Fine, age toning; 1928B VF, light stains; 1935E Fine; 1957A Fine; 1957B Fine; 1957 mostly CU(11). Also included is a $5 1953 SC STAR VF. Est. 50-75

901

Pair of $1 HAWAII Silver Certificates. [2]Fr.2300. Both F-VF, one lightly toned. Est. 50-75

902

Small Size Errors. [5] 1) $5 1953 Silver Certificate. Misaligned back. AU. 2) $10 1934A FRN. Gutter fold. VF. 3) $10 1950A FRN. Portion of the lower right corner on the back was folded under during the first printing; the the second printing was normal. EF. 4-5) $10 1950A FRN. Both gutter folds, both VF. Est. 50-75

903

Fr. 1870-G. $20. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. 1929. No.G01508595A. Plate I. VF-EF. Est. 35-50

904

Fr. 1880-G. $50. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. 1929. No.G00063159A. Plate I. EF-AU.Est. 75-125

905

Trio of Small Size $20 Gold Certificates. [3] Fr.2402. VF to EF, some light soiling in spots, but overall quite decent. Est. 125-250

906

Quintet of Fractional Currency Notes. [5] Fr. 1230. 5 Cent. AU; Fr. 1242. 10 Cent. AU; Fr. 1261 10 Cent. EF-AU. Fr. 1267. 15 Cent. EF; Fr. 1302; 25 Cent. VF. Est. 100-150

907 907

Heath’s Counterfeit Detector Counting House Edition. 1870. Dies, counter, vignettes, fractional currency, national bank notes, Federal notes and more. Some light dampstaining, otherwise very presentable. Est. 400-600

908

Heath’s Counterfeit Detector At Sight. Green 1864 Pocket Edition. Vignettes, dies, counters. Bank of Albion, NY obsolete note tiped in. Very light an even age toning throughout. Minor wear on the covers. Est. 200-300

Page 97


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

NATIONAL BANK NOTES

The Artesian Collection of National Bank Notes No two collectors are exactly alike, and their reasons for creating a collection are just as varied. At first glance the Artesian Collection appears to be a diverse grouping of unrelated Nationals with no central theme. Geographically, the notes ranged from Alabama to Wyoming. The types represented covered the full range from Original Series to 1929 Type II Nationals. Upon further inspection several themes become apparent. Our consignor had a deep and abiding appreciation for long, complex and interesting bank titles, regardless of location. He liked Nationals from state capitals. Not everyone recognizes the artistic merits of National bank notes, but our consignor had a wonderful eye for beautiful title layouts. He also recognized rarity when he saw it, and he acquired scarcer Nationals when the opportunities arose. Another central theme was Grange banks. In the 1870s American farmer's wives and their husbands joined The Patrons of Husbandry, an organization that sponsored dances, fairs and lectures. It was a social organization for farmers. In the 1880s, the Grange became a popular throughout agricultural areas of the United States. It was initially supposed to be non-political and dedicated to taking women from their "enslaved role" into full participation in the agrarian movement with men. The Grange movement soon took on political overtones, attacking railroads for exploiting farmers. It helped elected politicians sympathetic to farmers who worked to regulate fares. Co-ops eventually began to take the place of the Grange, and to operate on a nonprofit basis. This allowed farmers to pool their resources and purchase items more cheaply, and to operate Credit Unions that acted like banks. The word “Grange” in a National Bank title clearly suggested that the bank officials might have a more sympathetic point of view regarding farmers. This would have been conducive to doing business in any agrarian community. Our consignor found this theme to be compelling and you will be hard-pressed to find a more comprehensive collection of Nationals with the word “Grange” in the title. Collectors are almost always attracted to rare and desirable notes, and our consignor was no exception. Some of the highlights in this collection include the Yuma, Arizona $10 1902 Plain Back; the Greenville, Mississippi $5 Brown Back with the “Circus Poster” layout, the Davenport, Iowa $100 Red Seal; the Annapolis, Maryland $10 1902 Plain Back; and a very impressive “discovery” note, the Ely, Nevada $5 1902 Date Back. Don’t miss this wonderful opportunity to add a few great Nationals to your collection.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

909

AL. Montgomery. Ch.1814. First National Bank of Montgomery. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A001248. Plate L. Crisp Uncirculated. A high grade state capital note. Est. 150-250

913 913 910 910

AZ. Mesa. Ch.11130. First National Bank of Mesa. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.B001699A. Plate H. Fine, small repaired edge split, left. Est. 1200-1600

AZ. Tucson. Ch.4287. Consolidated National Bank of Tucson. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 628. No.18668/18668. Plate C. VF, with bold black stamped signatures. Est. 1500-2500

Very Scarce Yuma Note

914 911 911

914

AZ. Yuma. Ch.7591. First National Bank of Yuma. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 628. No.B631546E/7794. Plate D. Fine. Bold black stamped signatures, with slight signature bleed through on the back. This bank only issued 1902 series notes. There are only 10 known survivors according to the census, all of which are plain back state notes like the present example. In Lyn Knight's March 10, 2007 sale, this note was sold for $6,500.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 1310. From the Peter Huntoon Arizona Collection. Est. 4000-6000

915

AR. Forrest City. Ch.13637. National Bank of Eastern Arkansas of Forrest City. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D000054A. Plate D. Fine.Est. 150-250

AZ. Phoenix. Ch.P3728. National Bank of Arizona at Phoenix. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 654. No.Z11018D/17926. Plate B. VF, trimmed close at the bottom, minor age toning in the margins. Faded president’s signature on this first title note. This note realized $3,200.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 4734 of CAA's Jan.4, 2001 sale. Est. 1500-2500

912 912

AZ. Phoenix. Ch.3728. First National Bank of Arizona at Phoenix. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.C001837A. Plate C. Fine, pin holes in the top margin. An appealing and relatively affordable western state capital note. Est. 400-600

Page 99


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

916 916

AR. Gravette. Ch.8237. First National Bank of Gravette. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.B000572A. Plate B. VF. Perfectly centered and very pleasing. A better bank, with only 11 small notes in the census. This note realized $1,800.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 1507 of Lyn Knight's Aug.11, 2000 sale. Est. 600-1000

919 919

AR. Pine Bluff. Ch.10768. National Bank of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 632. No.14742/14742. Plate C. VG-Fine, with some soil on the back. Attractive blue stamped signatures. This is a better Arkansas bank, with only nine large size notes in the entire census. Est. 400-600

920 917 917

920

AR. Little Rock. Ch.S3300. Exchange National Bank of Little Rock. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.Y80454B/12753. Plate D. VF. An attractive state capital note from a bank that issued only large size Nationals. Est. 400-600

CA. Los Angeles. Ch.P4096. National Bank of California at Los Angeles. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 471. No.R540940R/32852. Plate H. Very Choice Crisp Uncirculated, with original embossing. Five Dollar Brown Backs on this bank are very popular due to the exquisite layout of the bank title. One of very few California banks on which high grade brown backs are affordable. Pen signed by the cashier and the vice president. Est. 2000-3000

918 918

AR. Little Rock. Ch.S9037. England National Bank of Little Rock. $20. 1902 DB. Fr. 644. No.Z576043A/9809. Plate B. VF, with tight upper and lower margins. There are beautiful red stamped signatures on this state capital note. This bank only issued 1902 series notes and went into receivership in 1926. This note realized $1,000 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 1509 of Lyn Knight's Aug.11, 2000 sale. Est. 500-750

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921 921

CA. Martinez. Ch.P8692. First National Bank of Contra Costa County at Martinez. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 600. No.R423420E/8389. Plate H. VG-F, light soiling on the back, very tight lower margin, and the signatures have faded away. Despite these detriments, the note has even wear, good color and contrast, and is from a very desirable location. A 1902 series only bank was liquidated in 1923. Of the seven notes recorded in the census, two are the much more expensive red seals. Est. 750-1150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

925

922 922

CA. Redwood City. Ch.7279. First National Bank of San Mateo County at Redwood City. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 650. No.N219812H/8020. Plate B. VF-XF, trimmed into the lower left border. Very bright and attractive, with excellent stamped signatures. Est. 600-900

925

CA. Sacramento. Ch.8504. California National Bank of Sacramento. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.E023327A. Plate E. Uncirculated with a bit of light teller handling, good margins, and obvious embossing of the bank title and serial numbers. Another state capital note. Est. 150-250

Redwood City Number One Note

926 923 923

CA. Redwood City. Ch.7279. First National Bank of San Mateo County at Redwood City. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 1800-1. No.F000001A. Plate L. EF, with excellent embossing. While technically XF, due to a few diagonal folds, this note never circulated, and is just as clean and attractive as a Crisp Uncirculated example. Est. 1500-2500

924 924

CA. Sacramento. Ch.P2014. National Bank of D.O. Mills & Co., Sacramento. $50. 1902 DB. Fr. 671. No.A131937/1329. Plate B. VF. Bold black signatures and good margins add to the eye appeal of this state capital bank with an interesting history. A comparable note sold for $1,900.00 plus the buyer's premium in the CAA May 3, 2009 sale. Est. 1000-2000

926

CA. San Francisco. Ch.P9655. Bank of California National Association. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 692. No.A644076/6438. Plate A. F-VF, with legible black stamped signatures. This note achieved a price of $2,800.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 18184 of Heritage CAA's Sept.9, 2009 sale. Est. 1000-1500

927

CO. Denver. Ch.1651. Colorado National Bank of Denver. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A048842. Plate B. Almost Uncirculated, with deep embossing, and a slightly tight right margin. A virtual CU note with just a little too much handling at the right side. Est. 150-250

928

CT. Hartford. Ch.13038. Capital National Bank & Trust Company of Hartford. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 18001. No.F032033A. Plate F. Uncirculated, with excellent margins. Est. 150-250

929

CT. New Haven. Ch.1243. New Haven National Banking Association. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 606. No.107455/107455. Plate H. VG-Fine. The bottom margin is narrow. Est. 100-150

930

DE. Dover. Ch.1567. First National Bank of Dover. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A006207. Plate C. Crisp Uncirculated, with obvious embossing. A beautiful state capital note. Est. 150-250

Page 101


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

935

FL. Miami. Ch.13570. Florida National Bank & Trust at Miami. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A064310. Plate B. Fine, with a tight lower margin at the left side. Est. 100-150

931 931

DE. Wilmington. Ch.1420. National Bank of Delaware at Wilmington. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 598. No.14714/14714. Plate E. VF-EF. A clean, bright note with good margins and bold black stamped signatures. This example realized $1,800.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 1215 of Lyn Knight's Nov. 30, 2001 sale. Est. 750-1250

936 936

FL. Miami Beach. Ch.12047. Miami Beach First National Bank, Miami Beach. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 18021. No.D001271A. Plate J. Fine, with a tight lower margin. Est. 300-500

932 932

DE. Wilmington. Ch.1420. National Bank of Delaware at Wilmington. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.2718/2718. Plate E. F-VF, lightly pressed. An attractive note, with good margins and blue stamped signatures. Est. 500-750

937 937

HI. Honolulu. Ch.5550. Bishop National Bank of Hawaii at Honolulu. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A012062. Plate B. VF details, lightly pressed, with the appearance of a higher grade. The slightly scarcer 3rd Title, adopted Nov. 3, 1933. Est. 300-400

Very Scarce Idaho State Capital Note

933 933

934

DC. Washington. Ch.E5046. Riggs National Bank of Washington. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 474. No. N839393N/10240. Plate C. VF-EF, with excellent margins and legible black stamped signatures. Est. 500-750 DC. Washington. Ch.5046. Riggs National Bank of Washington. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No. F020654A. Plate L. Crisp Uncirculated, with good embossing. Est. 150-250

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938 938

ID. Boise. Ch.P10751. Overland National Bank of Boise. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 658. No.V234673B/3111. Plate A. VF. This bank was in business for just six years and issued only 1902 plainbacks. Very scarce, with only 8 single notes and a sheet recorded in the census. This note sold for $950.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 5257 of Lyn Knight's Aug.2, 2003 sale. Est. 750-1250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

942 939 939

IL. Chicago. Ch.M713. Commercial National Bank of Chicago. $10. 1902 RS. Fr. 613. No.H540483/18393. Plate B. VF-EF, with a tight right margin. Very clean and attractive, and the color is excellent. This example was sold for $1,700.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 16405 in CAA's Sept.13, 2006 sale. Est. 1000-1500

942

IL. National City. Ch.M9118. National Stock Yards National Bank. $20. 1902 DB. Fr. 644. No.T780837A/18205. Plate A. Fine, with light dirt on the back. This bank issued only 1902 Dated Backs, and has but 15 survivors recorded in the census. Est. 500-750

943

IL. National City. Ch.12991. National Stock Yards National Bank of National City. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.B006764A. Plate H. VF-EF. A clean note with good margins. Est. 100-150

944

IL. Springfield. Ch.205. First National Bank of Springfield. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.E001300A. Plate E. VF, with good margins. A clean and attractive state capital note. Est. 75-125

940 940

IL. Chicago. Ch.M9010. Live Stock Exchange National Bank of Chicago. $5. 1902 DB. Fr. 592. No.B650426/1678. Plate G. VF, with pen signatures. The bank issued only 1902 Series Red Seals and Dated Backs. The census reveals that 19 single notes and a sheet have survived from this bank. Est. 300-500

945 945

IN. East Chicago. Ch.M12058. United States National Bank of Indiana Harbor at East Chicago. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 634. No.Y523056E/2364. Plate B. Fine, minor ink mark on the back. Oversized president’s signature of Walter J. Riley on this ‘Forbidden Title’ note. The census shows 15 large notes known. This example brought $650.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 777 in Lyn Knight's Feb.19, 2000 sale. Est. 750-1000

946

IN. East Chicago. Ch.13531. First National Bank in East Chicago. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A003554. Plate H. EF, with good margins. Bright and clean, with noticeable embossing. Probably a successor bank to Ch.12058, as it also bears the bold signature of Walter J. Riley. Est. 100-200

941 941

IL. Chicago. Ch.13674. Live Stock National Bank of Chicago. $50. 1929 T2. Fr. 1803-2. No.A000032. Plate H. VF, with a slightly tight left margin. Very clean on the front, but there is light soil on the back. Est. 200-300

Page 103


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Lovely Series of 1875 Vincennes $10

947 947

IN. East Chicago. Ch.12058. United States National Bank of Indiana Harbor at East Chicago. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.F000580A. Plate L. Fine. Another “Forbidden Title.” This note also has Walter J.Riley’s bold signature The census shows 18 small size notes recorded for this bank. This note brought $900.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 2603 of CAA's Jan.17, 2000 sale. Est. 300-500

949 949

IN. Vincennes. Ch.1873. First National Bank of Vincennes. $10. 1875. Fr. 416. Red seal with scallops. No.K234232/3235. Plate B. Crisp Uncirculated. The presidents penned vanity signature in black contrasts nicely with the excellent red inks on this lovely example. Est. 3000-5000

“Imbricated” Title Layout

950 948 948

950

IN. Plymouth. Ch.2119. First National Bank of Marshall County at Plymouth. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 473. No.M502851/1716. Plate D. VF-EF with the appearance of a higher grade. Great margins, and beautiful pen signatures. The $5 Brownbacks isssued by this bank have an unusual title layout, which Peter Huntoon refers to as “imbricated”, which means overlapping or shingled. A $5 Brownback on this bank, graded EF, sold for $3,250.00 plus the buyer's premium in CAA's April 19, 2008 sale. Est. 1000-1500

IA. Cedar Rapids. Ch.3643. Cedar Rapids National Bank. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 469. No.Y5570/6427. Plate D. Crisp Uncirculated, with generous “boardwalk” margins. A beautiful bright note with pen signatures and an attractive “open layout”. Est. 1500-2500

Most single item lots can be viewed on our website www. spink.com, but not all multi-piece lots are imaged. Our specialist will gladly describe any multi-piece lot to you via Internet or telephone.

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

955

951 951

IA. Davenport. Ch.M15. First National Bank of Davenport. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 689. No. A699958/264. Plate A. EF, with delicate violet stamped signatures. The lower margin is tight at the right side. An unusual denomination and type from the nation’s first national bank to open for business in 1863. Est. 2500-3500

955

IA. Odebolt. Ch.M4511. First National Bank of Odebolt. $10. 1882 BB. Fr. 484. No.R855280R/3423. Plate B. VF-EF. Attractive, with good color, and black pen signatures. If the quarter creases weren’t quite as hard, the note would be EF. Est. 1000-1500

Important Davenport $100 Red Seal

956 956

952 952

IA. Davenport. Ch.M2695. First National Bank of Davenport. $100. 1902 RS. Fr. 686. No. A285069/1785. Plate A. PCGS VF 30 Apparent “Edge Repairs”. The note has a black stamped cashier’s signature and a brown penned president’s signature. Good margins and good color. In the same PCGS holder, the current example sold for $8,000.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 17559 of CAA's January, 2011 FUN sale. After Ch.15 lapsed in 1882, the First National Bank of Davenport was reorganized as Ch.2695. It operated under this charter for the next 29 years, retaking Ch.15 on May 22, 1911. Est. 6000-9000

953

IA. Des Moines. Ch.2307. Iowa-Des Moines National Bank & Trust Company, Des Moines. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D003083A. Plate D. Crisp Uncirculated, with easily observed embossing. A bright, clean, and attractive state capital note. Est. 150-250

954

IA. Des Moines. Ch.2307. Iowa-Des Moines National Bank & Trust Company, Des Moines. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D002504A. Plate D. Fine, with good margins. Another state capital note. Est. 60-80

KS. Beloit. Ch.W6701. German National Bank of Northern Kansas at Beloit. $5. 1902 DB. Fr. 590. No.U379920/1141. Plate E. VG-Fine, with light soil both sides. Good margins. Est. 500-750

957 957

Very Scarce Dodge City Note KS. Dodge City. Ch.7285. First National Bank in Dodge City. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.R964387H/1775. Plate B. Fine. The lower margin is tight at the left half. Slightly faded blue stamped signatures. A note from the fabled town of the old west. The large size census for this bank shows only one red seal and five 1902 Plain Backs recorded A similarly graded $10 1902 Plainback fetched $1,300.00 plus the buyers premium as Lot 1696 of Lyn Knight's March 11, 2006 sale. Est. 600-900

Page 105


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

962

KY. Frankfort. Ch.5376. National Branch Bank of Kentucky Frankfort. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A000033. Plate C. VF, with great margins. Another Kentucky state capital note. Est. 150-250

958 958

KS. Manhattan. Ch.W3782. First National Bank of Manhattan. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 691. No.A889851/729. Plate C. PCGS Extremely Fine 45 PPQ. Also noted on the holder is: ‘James A. Kadin, M.D. Collection’. A clean note, with excellent margins, great contrast and color, and pen signatures of the cashier and vice president. A wonderful example of this elusive denomination and type. For the 1902 Series, this bank only issued high denomination notes($50 and $100). In the same holder, this note fetched $2,500 plus a 15% buyer's premium in StacksBowers Philadelphia ANA sale on August 17, 2012. Est. 2000-3000

959

KS. Topeka. Ch.12740. National Bank of Topeka. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A006823. Plate A. AU. This note would be an embossed CU, but for a few corner folds. Great margins on this state capital note. Est. 150-250

960

KS. Union Stock Yards. Ch.9758. Union Stock Yards National Bank. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.C000362A. Plate I. VG-Fine. Only six notes are reported on this bank, all from the bank's 1882 issues. This note was previously offered as Lot 28957 of Heritage CAA's May 1, 2003 sale in which it fetched 1,500.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 150-250

961 961

KS. Wichita. Ch.W5169. National Bank of Commerce of Wichita. $10. 1882 BB. Fr. 490. No.B176934B/1800. Plate C. EF, with great margins. A clean note with good color and attractive pen signatures of the cashier and vice president. This bank only issued $50 and $100 notes in both large and small size. Only seven large notes are known on this bank. In the same holder, this note sold for $4,500.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 15682 in Heritage CAA's April, 2011 CSNS sale in Rosemont, IL. Est. 1500-2500

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963 963

KY. Frankfort. Ch.S5376. National Branch Bank of Kentucky. $10. 1882 DB. Fr. 545. No.M98726/4658. Plate E. Fine, with good margins and color, but the signatures are gone and the note has a few pinholes. From Kentucky’s state capital. Est. 600-900

964

KY. Louisville. Ch.S5312. National Bank of Kentucky of Louisville. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 607. No.R249582E/114551. Plate F. VF-XF, with a slightly tight lower margin. Clean, bright, and attractive on both sides, with bold black stamped signatures. Est. 150-250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Very Scarce Owenton Note With an Unusual Sub-Variety

969

970

965 965

KY. Owenton. Ch.W2868. First National Bank of Owenton. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 689. No.1243/1243. Plate C. PMG Choice Extremely Fine 45 PPQ. The holder also states: ‘Don Kelly Collection’. This pen signed note appears to be more deserving of an AU grade. This note is also a very scarce sub-variety that pairs the dated back reverse with the bank serial number in both the upper and lower positions. The notes with the same serial numbers in both upper and lower positions had their serial numbers applied between 1925 and 1929. For the most part, the dated back notes were issued prior to 1916.This bank only issued $50 and $100 notes in both large and small size. Only seven large notes are known on this bank. In the same holder, this note sold for $4,500.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 15682 in Heritage CAA's April, 2011 CSNS sale in Rosemont, IL. Est. 3000-4500

966

LA. Baton Rouge. Ch.9834. Louisiana National Bank of Baton Rouge. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.E005095A. Plate K. Fine, with a tight lower margin. A presentable state capital note. Est. 100-150

LA. New Iberia. Ch.3671. New Iberia National Bank. $5. 1929 T1. Fr.1800-1. No.D002378A. Plate J. VF, with a slightly tight top margin. Est. 150-250

970

ME. Augusta. Ch.498. First National Granite Bank of Augusta. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.632. No.22001/22001. Plate B. AU, with no top margin. Stamped signatures on this 2nd title state capital note. This note fetched $500.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 1720 in Lyn Knight's April 25, 2003 sale. Est. 450-600

971

967

LA. Gretna Ch.13732. First National Bank of Jefferson Parish at Gretna. $5. 1929 T2. Fr.1800-2. No.A002773. Plate G. Fine, with good margins. A scarce note with a parish title, which is unique to Louisiana. Est. 300-500

971

ME. Belfast. Ch.840. Belfast National Bank. $2. Original Series. Fr.387. No.D518658/7760. Plate A. VF. A very attractive note, with good paper and vibrant red ink. The only detriments are the New England cut at the left and right margins, and a light smudge at the far right. Legible pen signatures. Est. 4000-6000

968 968

LA. Lake Charles. Ch.10836. Calcasieu National Bank of Southwest Louisiana at Lake Charles. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.632. No.19385/19385. Plate B. F-VF, with good borders and legible black stamped signatures. Est. 750-1000

Page 107


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Scarce State Capital Note

972 972

977

MD. Frederick. Ch.1449. Frederick County National Bank. $5. 1929 T1. Fr.1800-1. No.F007303A. Plate F-VF, with boardwalk margins. Est. 100-150

978

MD. Leonardtown. Ch.6608. First National Bank of St. Mary’s at Leonardtown. $10. 1929 T2. Fr.18012. No.A000010. Plate J. EF-AU. No vertical folds, just a horizontal crease about 5/8” below the upper edge. An attractive note with no dirt except for an ink smudge on the lower left counter on the back. Est. 300-500

979

MD. Upper Marlboro. Ch.5471. First National Bank of Southern Maryland of Upper Marlboro. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.659. No.A20203K/3641. Plate A. Fine, stain on back. The upper margin is cut to the border at the right side. Light stamped signatures. Est. 500-750

A Scarce State Capital Note MD. Annapolis. Ch.E1244. Farmers National Bank of Annapolis. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.624. No.E628229D/12595. Plate D. F-VF. Trimmed to the top border at the right side. With only two banks in this city, and a limited number of notes available, Annapolis is one of the most elusive state capital notes. This note was previously offered as Lot 3468 of Lyn Knight's Nov. 11, 2004 sale, where it realized $6,000.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 3000-4500

980 980

MA. Boston. Ch.N200. First National Bank of Boston. $50. 1902 DB. Fr. 667. No.A74232/1491. Plate E. XF, with the appearance of a CU note. Tight upper margin. Attractive printed signatures. Clean on both sides, a note that probably never saw actual circulation. Est. 2000-3000

981

MA. Boston. Ch.N1527. Webster And Atlas National Bank of Boston. $10. 1902 DB. Fr.616. No.D201565B/24151. Plate D. Crisp Uncirculated, but with no lower margin. Attractive, with bold black printed signatures. Est. 300-500

981a

MA. Boston. Ch.12540. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers National Bank of Boston. $5. 1902 PB. Fr.609. No.A103508K. Plate A. Perhaps the longest National Bank Note title. About Fine. Est. 150-250

973 973

MD. Baltimore. Ch.E1489. National Union Bank of Maryland at Baltimore. $5. 1902 RS. Fr.587. No.K647873/13706. Plate C. About Fine, with a tight upper margin. Despite some wear, the red ink is still vivid. Stamped signatures. This note was previously offered as Lot 5325 of Lyn Knight's Aug. 2, 2003 sale, where it sold for $1,150.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 500-750

974

MD. Baltimore. Ch.1489. National Union Bank of Maryland at Baltimore. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.624. No.R390268H/86186. Plate E. F-VF, with a tight lower margin. Stamped signatures. Est. 200-300

975

MD. Baltimore. Ch. 2453. National Marine Bank of Baltimore. $100. 1902 PB. Fr.705. No.B94553/479. Plate A. VF, with no lower margin. Light violet stamped signatures. Est. 200-300

976

MD. Frederick. Ch.1449. Frederick County National Bank, Frederick. $5. 1902 PB. Fr.598. No.37695/37695. Plate I. VF-EF, with a tight lower margin. A clean note with engraved signatures. Est. 300-500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

982 982

983

MA. Buzzards Bay. Ch.13222. Buzzards Bay National Bank. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.A000417A. Plate G. VG-Fine, light stains. This note was previously offered as Lot 20360 of Heritage CAA's January 8, 2004 sale, where it fetched $950.00 plus the buyer's premium. Traditionally one of the more sought after titles in this state, Buzzards Bay is part of Barnstable County, which also includes Cape Cod. Est. 600-900 MA. Lawrence. Ch.N1014. Bay State National Bank of Lawrence. $10. 1902 DB. Fr.616. No.H961773B/21707. Plate E. VF-EF, with well applied stamped signatures. Tight lower margin. Est. 150-250

985 985

. 986

MI. Grand Rapids. Ch.3293. Grand Rapids National Bank. $100. 1902 PB. Fr. 701. No.1520/1520. Plate A. VF-EF, with very little remaining of the lower margin. Stamped signatures on this 3rd title note. This note was previously offered as Lot 1474 in Lyn Knight's June 4, 2009 sale, where it brought $1,600.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1500-2000 MI. Lansing. Ch.8148. Capital National Bank of Lansing. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.B003988A. Plate B. Crisp Uncirculated, with good margins. An attractive state capital note. Est. 150-250

987 984 984

MA. Lenox. Ch.N4013. Lenox National Bank. $5. 1882 BB. Fr.470. No.E637609E/7386. Plate D. VF-EF, with the appearance of a CU note. Other than some very subliminal folds, this note’s only detriment is a small ink smudge on the back near the upper left corner. A beautiful bright note with good margins and legible pen signatures. Attractive ‘open layout’. Previously offered as Lot 2377 of CAA's Jan. 5, 2001 sale, where it sold for $1,450.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1250

987

MN. Minneapolis. Ch.M2006. North Western National Bank of Minneapolis. $10. 1882 BB. Fr. 485. No.A262853/9253. Plate G. VF, with excellent margins and bold printed signatures. A clean note with good color. Est. 500-750

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Very Unusual “Open Layout” on a 1902 Red Seal

A Gorgeous “Circus Poster” $5 Brown Back Discovery Note

988

992

988

MN. St. Paul. Ch.M2959. St. Paul National Bank. $10. 1902 RS. Fr. 613. No.D955323/9237. Plate C. VF, with good color, excellent margins, and legible stamped signatures. An attractive state capital red seal on a very scarce bank. Previously offered as Lot 19683 of Heritage CAA's Jan. 9, 2003 sale, in which it realized $2,400.00 plus the buyer's premium. This note has a striking appearance. Unlike most 1902 series notes, the city is not enclosed in a 'tombstone'. The 'open layout' is reminiscent of an early 1882 Series $5 Brownback. This bank was in business from 1883 to 1906, only issuing 1882 Brown Backs and 1902 Red Seals. The census shows two 1882 Brown Backs and eight 1902 Red Seals reported for this bank. Est. 1000-1500

989

MN. Stillwater. Ch.2674. First National Bank of Stillwater. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.A001330A. Plate G. Crisp Uncirculated, with good margins. Est. 150-250

992

MS. Greenville. Ch.S3765. First National Bank of Greenville. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 470. No.E986842E/6854. Plate A. VF-XF. Excellent margins, and the top margin includes the sheet selvage. Clean and attractive, with solid paper, good color, and pen signatures. Two pinholes to the left of the portrait are the only detractions. Among National Bank Note enthusiasts, few notes are as exciting as $5 Brown Backs with circus poster layouts for the bank's title and location. Only found on the issues of a small number of banks, they are thought to be the most attractive layouts of all the interesting designs found on $5 Brown Backs. Two circus poster notes appear in the census for this bank, one in VG and the other in Fine. Accordingly, we feel comfortable asserting that this discovery note is the highest grade circus poster known on this bank, and the only one of the three which is an attractive high grade note. The Fine circus poster on this bank was auctioned as Lot 1147 of Lyn Knight's Nov. 17, 2006 sale, fetching $9,500.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 10000-15000

990 990

991

MS. Columbus. Ch.S10738. Columbus National Bank. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 632. No.U39621/1466. Plate D. VF, with a tight lower margin. Pen signed. Clean, except for a small spot on the back. The scarce 1st title for this bank. Previously auctioned as Lot 1842 in Lyn Knight's June 12, 2011 Memphis sale, where it fetched $2,400.00 plus the buyer's premium. The census shows 11 Large notes recorded. Est. 1000-1500 MS. Columbus. Ch.10361. National Bank of Commerce of Columbus. $10. 1929 T2. Fr.1801-2. No.A004417. Plate G. AU, with only a lower right corner crease keeping it from CU. Tight right margin.

Est. 150-250

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993 993

MS. Jackson. Ch.3332. First National Bank of Jackson. $100. 1902 PB. Fr. 698. No.955/955. Plate C. Fine, with a few pinholes. Stamped signatures. An unusual denomination for this southern state capital. Est. 3000-5000

994

MS. Jackson. Ch.6646. Capital National Bank of Jackson. $20. 1929. Fr. 1802-1. No.F001295A. Plate L. AU, kept from a CU grade by some crimping in the upper margin. A bright and clean state capital note. Est. 150-250


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

995

MS. Laurel. Ch.11898. Commerce National Bank and Trust Company of Laurel. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 607. No.44760/44760. Plate G. VG, with light dirt. Engraved signatures. Previously sold as Lot 2245 of R.M. Smythe's May 3, 1999 sale, where it sold for $275.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 300-450

996

MS. Laurel. Ch.11898. Commerce National Bank and Trust Company of Laurel. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A028716. Plate F. Fine+, with good margins. The back has some light dirt at the right side. Est. 150-250

997

MS.Yazoo City. Ch.12587. Delta National Bank of Yazoo City. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 1800-1. No.B003559A. Plate H. Net AU. An otherwise CU note with some very faint shadowing of the back design on the front, mainly noticeable in the lower left and upper right corners. Tight right margin. Est. 150-250

998

MO. Jefferson City. Ch.13142. Exchange National Bank of Jefferson City. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A007811. Plate E. AU, with only a very faint center fold and an upper right corner fold keeping it from a CU designation. A clean, bright, and attractive state capital note. Est. 150-250

Rare Kansas City Title

1000 1000

MO. Kansas City. Ch.M11377. Continental National Bank of Jackson County at Kansas City. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 632. No.V216102D/1490. Plate C. Fine, with stamped signatures. This bank was only in business for about 3 ½ years, from June, 1919 to Jan., 1923. Only five 1902 Plain backs are currently recorded in the census; the present note being one of them. Est. 1000-1500

1001 1001

MT. Helena. Ch.5671. National Bank of Montana, Helena. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 633. No.11062/11062. Plate A. Fine, with good margins. Printed black signatures on this state capital note.A much scarcer bank in small size notes, with only nine examples recorded in the census. Est. 750-1000

1002

MT. Helena. Ch.5671. National Bank of Montana, Helena. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D000099A. Plate D. Fine, with an ink blot on the back, and a ½” lower edge tear, about 1” to the right of the portrait. An additional note on this state capital bank. A much scarcer bank in small size notes, with only nine examples recorded in the census. Est. 600-900

1003

NE. Albion. Ch.4173. Albion National Bank. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.A000197A. Plate G. Almost Unc. - Crisp Unc. A beautiful note with very obvious embossing. CU, but for some handling at the left side. Est. 150-250

1004

NE. Lincoln. Ch.13333. Continental National Bank of Lincoln. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.F000444A. Plate F. Crisp Uncirculated, with huge margins and embossing. The note has some handling at the left side. An attractive state capital note. Est. 150-250

999 999

MO. Joplin. Ch.4425. Joplin National Bank. $100. 1902 PB. Fr. 701. No.2598/2598. Plate B. VF, very clean, with good color. Attractive two-color pen signatures, with the cashier signing in blue pen and the president signing in brown pen. The 1st title for this bank. Est. 1500-2000

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Nevada Discovery Note Previously Unknown Type and Denomination for This Bank 1007 1007

1005 1005

NV. Reno. Ch.7038. Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Reno. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 598. No.50622/50622. Plate G. VF/XF, pressed, with black printed signatures and great margins. Clean on both sides. The first title for this bank. Est. 4000-6000

NE. Nebraska City. Ch.W2536. Merchants National Bank of Nebraska City. $100. 1902 PB. Fr. 705. No.A892318/96. Plate A. VF, pressed, with good margins. The cashier’s signature is missing, and the president’s signature is penned. A scarce bank in large size, with only ten notes reported. This bank only issued $50 and $100 notes for Series 1882, 1902, and 1929. The present note was previously auctioned as Lot 19445 in CAA's Sept. 21, 2005 sale, achieving $2,600.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1500-2500

1006 1006

NV. Ely. Ch.P8561. First National Bank of Ely. $5. 1902 DB. Fr. 592. No.Y483829/1134. Plate F. Fine+, with good color and contrast, and delicate violet stamped signatures. The lower margin is cut unevenly and tight in several places. Although a new denomination and type wouldn't be very exciting for banks in many states, this note is on a better bank in a very avidly collected state with only 16 issuing banks. It has probably been quite a few years since the last new Nevada denomination/type combination surfaced. With no red seals known, this is one of the earliest survivors on this bank. The census shows only one other 1902 Dated Back note, a $10 note which grades Good, and was auctioned in 1995. Est. 15000-25000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1013

NJ. Kearny. Ch.8627. First National Bank And Trust Company of Kearny. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 1800-1. No.B003775A. Plate B. Fine-Very Fine, with good margins. Est. 200-300

1008 1008

1009

NV. Reno. Ch.7038. First National Bank in Reno. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A012963. Plate C. Crisp Uncirculated, with incredible embossing. The right margin is slightly tight. No folds, but there are traces of as-made paper wrinkling at the lower left. Previously sold by R.M.Smythe as Lot 2877 of the March 2, 2001Sale, where it fetched $1,500 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 3000-4000

1014 1014

NH. Concord. Ch.758. National State Capital Bank of Concord. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A005126. Plate B. Crisp Uncirculated, with some light handling at the left. The right margin is tight. Clean, bright, and attractive. Est. 300-450

The Only Four-Word Town Name on National Bank Notes

Elusive Napier/Thompson Signatures

1010 1010

NJ. Cape May Court House. Ch.7945. First National Bank of Cape May Court House. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A000098. Plate H. Fine+, with good margins. The only bank in this southern New Jersey community, and this charter has the distinction of being the only issuing bank in the entire country with a four-word town name. Est. 1200-1800

1011

NJ. Jersey City. Ch.1182. Union Trust And Hudson County National Bank, Jersey City. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 598. No.R959154H/17718. Plate A. Extremely Fine, with some very light small stains, which are mainly visible on the back. Black printed signatures. The second title for this bank. Est. 200-300

1012

NJ. Jersey City. Ch.1182. Union Trust And Hudson County National Bank, Jersey City. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.23937. Plate B. About Fine, with black printed signatures. The second of this bank’s three titles. Est. 100-150

NJ. Orange. Ch.E4724. Second National Bank of Orange. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 472. No.H178781H/616. Plate A. Extremely Fine, a fresh original note with good color and attractive pen signatures. Although not particularly scarce in large size, only six 1882 Series notes appear in the census for this bank. This note was previously auctioned as Lot 1128 in Lyn Knight's March 3, 2001 sale, where it fetched $2,800.00 plus the buyer's Premium. Est. 2500-3500

1015 1015

NJ. Princeton. Ch.4872. First National Bank of Princeton. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 603. No.23257/23257. Plate C. Very Fine-Extremely Fine, with a tight upper margin. Clean, with stamped signatures. An unusually nice example of a large note on this charter. Large notes on this bank are in demand for two reasons. One is the association with the Ivy League university located in this town. The other is the Napier/Thompson signatures, which appear on the notes of relatively few banks which chartered or rechartered during the 8 ½ months of Napier and Thompson's joint tenure. Est. 750-1250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1016

NJ. Trenton. Ch.1327. First-Mechanics National Bank of Trenton. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A013175. Plate K. Crisp Uncirculated, with obvious embossing. The lower margin is tight, and cut to the border near the lower right corner. The upper margin includes the entire gutter, and a sliver of the border from the adjacent note can be seen at the upper right. A clean, bright, and attractive state capital note. Est. 150-250

1019

NJ. West Englewood. Ch.12402. West Englewood National Bank. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 1800-2. No.A006899. Plate K. About Very Fine, pressed, with good margins. West Englewood was actually a section of the town of Teaneck. The Comptroller of the Currency (the part of the Treasury Dept. that regulated National Banks) permitted banks to adopt location names if there was a Post Office bearing that name. Since this bank was the only issuer in the town, Teaneck was one of the largest towns in New Jersey (by population) without an issuing bank bearing its name. Est. 300-450

1020

NM. Albuquerque. Ch.12485. Albuquerque National Trust And Savings Bank. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A000957. Plate I. Very Fine, with excellent margins. Est. 150-250

Very Scarce First Title

1017 1017

NJ. Town of Union. Ch.9544. First National Bank of Town of Union. $5. 1902 PB. Fr.600. No.T994185H/8774. Plate D. Very Good-Fine, with a red teller stamp on the back, near the lower right counter. The lower margin is cut to the border at the right side. Although this bank isn't rare, most of the survivors on this bank bear the later Union City title, with too few of the rare first title notes available to collectors. This note was previously offered as Lot 1911 of Lyn Knight's Nov.19, 2005 sale where it fetched $1,300.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1250

1018 1018

NJ. Union City. Ch.9867. National Bank of North Hudson at Union City. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 601. No.2209/2209. Plate C. Fine-Very Fine, with good margins. The back has a small teller stamp impression at the lower right. This note bears the second title for this bank. This note has black printed signatures. In the cashier's position, someone has crossed out the engraved 'Cashier' that appears below the signature line, and substituted 'V.P.' in pen. Est. 450-600

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1021 1021

NM. Santa Fe. Ch.W1750. First National Bank of Santa Fe. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 628. No.U676752E/5400. Plate A. Fine. Two-color pen signatures, with Charles J.Eckert, ‘a’ cashier in black, and the president’s signature in light blue ink. A pleasing state capital note. Previously offered as Lot 19516 of Heritage CAA's Sept.21, 2005 sale, where it fetched $1,700 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

1022

NY. Albany. Ch.E1301. National Commercial Bank of Albany. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 650. No.R496690D/82636. Plate D. Very Fine, pressed. Clean on both sides. Black stamped signatures. Below the president’s signature line, the word ‘Vice’ has been stamped. An attractive state capital note on this bank’s first title. Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1023 1023

NY. Buffalo. Ch.E6186. Manufacturers And Traders National Bank of Buffalo. $100. 1902 PB. Fr. 706. No.B16372/1398. Plate A. PCGS Extremely Fine 45 PPQ. The lower margin is a bit narrow. Printed signatures. This is one of only three $100 1902 Plain Backs recorded in the census for this bank which issued large size notes only and liquidated in Nov., 1925. The present note was previously offered as Lot 18253 of Heritage CAA's Jan.10, 2012 sale, where it sold for $4,000.00 plus the buyer's premium in the same PCGS holder. Est. 3000-4000

1025 1025

NY. Great Neck Station. Ch.12659. First National Bank of Great Neck at Great Neck Station. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 609. No.12913/12913. Plate C. Very Fine. The back has some small light stain spots in the upper right quarter. One of the most interesting titles in New York. From Nassau County, which has traditionally been one of the most avidly collected counties in the state. A comparably graded note was offered as Lot 18299 of Heritage CAA's Jan 10, 2012 sale, where it realized $1,400.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1200-1600

1026

NY. New York. Ch.1261. National Butchers And Drovers Bank of the City of New York. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.33193/33193. Plate I. Very Fine, with a tight lower margin. This bank only issued large size notes, liquidating in Sept., 1926 Est. 150-250

1024 1024

NY. Castleton on Hudson. Ch.5816. National Exchange Bank of Castleton on Hudson. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 607. No.556/556. Plate C. Very Fine, with some light paper aging in the margins. Stamped signatures. From this bank's second title, adopted Jan.25, 1927. Only six large size notes have been recorded in the census for the second title, which is not surprising as only 1458 sheets were issued for this title. This note was previously offered as Lot 3390 of Lyn Knight's June 13, 2002 sale, where it brought $810.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1250

1027 1027

NY. New York. Ch.E1290. Citizens Central National Bank of New York. $10. 1902 RS. Fr. 613. No.A672782/19651. Plate G. Very Fine-Extremely Fine, with great margins. Very appealing, with vivid red ink and bold printed signatures. The second title for this bank. Est. 750-1250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1028 1028

NY. New York. Ch.E29. First National Bank of The City of New York. $50. 1902 DB. Fr. 667. No.A409748/11110. Plate E. Very Fine, with some light dirt on the back. Black printed signatures. Although notes on this bank are common, high denomination 1902 Series Blue Seals are tough, in part because they were only issued as dated backs. Only two $50 and two $100 1902 dated backs are recorded in the census. A note comparable in grade to the present note was offered as Lot 1969 of Lyn Knight's June 12, 2011 sale, where it fetched $2,000 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

1029

NY. New York. Ch.13296. National Bank of Queens County in New York. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A000715. Plate A. VG-Fine, lightly soiled, with a tight left margin. Est. 150-250

1032 1032

NY. New York. Ch.E4567. Western National Bank of the United States in New York. $5. 1882 BB. Fr. 477. No.H106071H/19431. Plate A. Very Fine-Extremely Fine, with great margins and oversized printed signatures. The third title on this bank. Only 11 notes reported in the census for this bank's third title. Est. 1200-1800

1033

Unusual Vice President/President Signature Combination

1033

NY. New York. Ch.12965. National Bank of Yorkville in New York. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 609. No.4491/4491. Plate B. Very Fine. The lower margin is tightly cut, particularly near the lower right corner, where it is cut to the border. Yorkville is a neighborhood located on the upper east side of Manhattan. Est. 750-1000

1030 1030

1031

NY. New York. Ch.12897. National Bank of Ridgewood in New York. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 609. No.3/3. Plate D. Very Fine-Extremely Fine, with good margins. Pen signed. Ridgewood is a neighborhood in the Borough of Queens, a part of New York City. Est. 1200-1800 NY. New York. Ch.6198. Staten Island National Bank & Trust Company of New York. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.C000681A. Plate C. Very Fine, with great margins. From the most suburban of New York City's five boroughs. Est. 150-250

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1034 1034

NY. Niagara Falls. Ch.12284. National Bank of Niagara and Trust Company of Niagara Falls. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 635. No.13120/13120. Plate C. Very Fine, with good margins. Engraved signatures. The second title for this bank, adopted in Sept., 1927. The bank only issued 1902 Plain Back notes, and there are eleven of the second title notes reported in the census. Est. 800-1200


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1038

ND. Bismarck. Ch.2434. First National Bank of Bismarck. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.A000008A. Plate A. Fine-Very Fine, with good margins. This note bears one of the most unusual signatures found on small size Nationals. The president's signature is a 3/8" wide undecipherable ink spot. Est. 150-250

1039

ND. Bismarck. Ch.13398. Dakota National Bank & Trust Company of Bismarck. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 18001. No.A000839A. Plate A. Fine, with tight lower and left margins. An evenly circulated note from North Dakota’s state capital. Est. 150-250

1040

ND. Grand Forks. Ch.2570. First National Bank of Grand Forks. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.A001489A. Plate G. About Uncirculated. Clean, bright, and attractive, with only a vertical fold and corner creases keeping this from a CU grade. The third title for this bank. Est. 150-250

1035 1035

NY. Rome. Ch.1410. Fort Stanwix National Bank of Rome. $1. 1865. Fr. 380. No.A589436/991. Plate B. A handsome, First Charter Period note from this Oneida County city in New York’s Leatherstocking region. About Uncirculated, with embossing and great margins, particularly for this series. Attractive pen signatures. Good color and contrast, with vibrant red ink. A better bank, with the census showing only 16 notes reported. This institution went into receivership in 1896, having issued only Original Series, 1875 Series, and 1882 Brown Backs.Est. 2000-3000

1041 1041 1036 1036

NY. Stapleton. Ch.E7290. Richmond Borough National Bank of Stapleton. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.N659278E/8126. Plate F. A very rare and important note from this Staten Island village, with only four large notes known. Fine, evenly circulated, with a tight upper margin. Stamped signatures. Set along the Upper New York Bay in northeastern Staten Island, Stapleton was built in the 1830's by Manhattan merchant William J. Staples on land once owned by the Vanderbilts. The present-day Paramount Theatre on Bay Street - a popular venue in the early 1980's for New Wave and Punk bands such as the B-52s, the Squeeze and the Ramones, in fact, sits on the site of the farm where Cornelius Vanderbilt grew up. Between 1929 and 1931, this erstwhile village had its very own NFL pro football team, "the Staten Island Stapletons," while along the waterfront, several of its piers were used from 1937 to 1942 to form the ' first foreign trade zone in the United States.

OH. Ashland. Ch.M183. First National Bank of Ashland. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 689. No.A225109/35. Plate C. VF, clean and attractive, with good margins. Pen signed, with an oversized vice president’s signature. This bank issued high denominations($50 and $100) only for all of its 1882, 1902, and 1929 issues. Just five large notes are recorded in the census. This note was previously offered as Lot 4922 of Lyn Knight's June 28, 2008 sale, where it fetched $3,600.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1800-2500

Est. 4500-6000 1037

NC. Charlotte. Ch.5055. Charlotte National Bank. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.C005005A. Plate I. Crisp Uncirculated, with embossing and some minor dirt in the obligation area above the portrait. Est. 150-250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1042 1042

OH. Bucyrus. Ch.M443. First National Bank of Bucyrus. $10. 1902 RS. Fr. 613. No.K45399/710. Plate A. Crisp Uncirculated, with only a tight lower margin (near the right corner) and some teller handling keeping it from a choice grade. Attractive twocolor pen signatures, with the cashier’s signature in light brown ink, and the vice president’s signature in black ink. Est. 2000-3000

1043

OH. Columbus. Ch.5065. Ohio National Bank of Columbus. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.E003848A. Plate K. Gem Uncirculated. Gradewise, this is as good as it gets, with boardwalk margins, and very obvious embossing. A very clean state capital note. Est. 150-250

1045 1045

OH. New Philadelphia. Ch.M1999. Citizens National Bank of New Philadelphia. $100. 1902 DB. Fr. 693. No.A667035/857. Plate A. Almost Unc.Uncirculated, with only a corner tip fold and some teller handling keeping this note from a full CU grade. Charter number and regional letter embossing can be seen on the back. Violet stamped cashier’s signature, and pen signed president’s signature. Tightly margined at the left and near the upper right corner. This bank's 1882 and 1902 issues are all high denominations($50 and $100). A scarce Tuscarawas county note. Est. 3500-4500

1046

OH. Washington Court House. Ch.13490. First National Bank of Washington Court House. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A002954. Plate B.Almost Uncirculated. The note has no vertical folds, but it has a lower right corner fold, a horizontal crimp in the upper margin, and some light fingerprint smudging. This Fayette County bank only issued small size notes. Est. 150-250

1047

OK. Tulsa. Ch.5171. First National Bank And Trust Company of Tulsa. $100. 1929 T1. Fr. 1804-1. No.B000355A. Plate H. VF, with good margins. Except for two small ink smudges on the back, the note is clean on both sides. All 1902 and small size issues from this bank were high denominations ($50 and $100). Est. 250-350

1044 1044

OH. Milford. Ch.3234. Milford National Bank. $10. 1882 BB. Fr. 480. No.W187100E/1727. Plate B. Very Choice Uncirculated. Clean, with good color and contrast. Pen signed. A comparably graded $10 Brown Back on this bank was offered as Lot 2603 of Lyn Knight's March 10, 2012 sale, where it fetched $2,200.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 2000-2500

1048 1048

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OR. Salem. Ch.3405. First National Bank in Salem. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.F000373A. Plate F. VG-Fine, with a couple of pinholes and a tight left margin. Evenly circulated. With only two small size issuers in Salem, there are a limited number of small notes available to state capital collectors. This note was previously offered as Lot 3635 of Heritage CAA's Jan.10, 2002 sale, where it realized $550.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 500-750


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1052

PA. Downingtown. Ch.8646. Grange National Bank of Chester County at Downingtown. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.D000735A. Plate J. Evenly circulated About Fine. The lower margin is tight, particularly near the right corner. Est. 300-500

1053

PA. Downingtown. Ch.8646. Grange National Bank of Chester County at Downingtown. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.B000522A. Plate B. An attractive VF note. Unfortunately, it has a ½â€? edge tear at the upper right counter. Good margins. Est. 300-500

1049 1049

OR. Marshfield. Ch.7475. First National Bank of Coos Bay at Marshfield. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 624. No.19827/19827. Plate I. Very Fine detail with some staining and steam scorching. Oversized black stamped signatures. Good margins. Est. 1000-1500

A Group of Downingtown Grange National Bank Notes 1054 1054

1050 1050

PA. Downingtown. Ch.8646. Grange National Bank of Chester County at Downingtown. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 626. No.25663/25663. Plate D. Fine, with a tight upper margin. Slightly faded violet stamped signatures. The Grange banks were organized by Grange associations. These National Banks were only located in the state of Pennsylvania, where there were ten such institutions. Notes on most of these banks are offered in this sale. This bank has nine large notes reported in the census. A comparably graded note was offered as Lot 14148 in Heritage CAA's Sept.26, 2007 sale, where it sold for $1,500.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1200-1800

PA. Highland Park. Ch.13196. State Road National Bank of Highland Park. $20. 1929 T2. Fr. 1802-2. No.A000683. Plate E. VF-XF, clean and attractive, with good margins. A very scarce Cumberland County bank that only issued Type 2 small size notes. Only 1094 of the $20 denomination were issued by this bank. A comparably graded note was sold as Lot 14926 of Heritage CAA's Jan.11, 2010 sale, where it fetched $750.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 600-900

A Selection of Hughesville Grange National Bank Notes

1055 1055

1051 1051

PA. Downingtown. Ch.8646. Grange National Bank of Chester County at Downingtown. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 652. No.26222/26222. Plate B. Attractive VF, with delicate violet stamped signatures. Est. 1500-2000

PA. Hughesville. Ch.8924. Grange National Bank of Lycoming County at Hughesville. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 600. No.Y921409H/8473. Plate E. VF. A clean note, but with some light staining at the left and right margins. Delicate violet stamped signatures. A scarce bank in both large and small size issues. The census shows only eight large notes reported. A comparable note was offered as Lot 18554 of Heritage CAA's Jan.10, 2012 sale, where it fetched $850.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1056 1056

PA. Hughesville. Ch.E8924. Grange National Bank of Lycoming County at Hughesville. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 652. No.Y591692B/2703. Plate B. Fine, with evenly cut margins and some light dirt on the back. Very attractive red stamped signatures. Est. 600-900

1059 1059

PA. New Milford. Ch.8960. Grange National Bank of Susquehanna County at New Milford. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 600. No.12299/12299. Plate H. A nicelymargined Fine-Very Fine, with a penned cashier’s signature and a slightly faded stamped president’s signature. Another elusive Grange note, which is very scarce in both large and small size issues. The census shows seven large size notes reported for this charter. Est. 1000-1500

1057 1057

PA. Hughesville. Ch.8924. Grange National Bank of Lycoming County at Hughesville. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D000072A. Plate D. Fine, clean and attractive with excellent margins. Est. 400-600

1060 1060

Scarce Large Note from the Laceyville

PA. New Milford. Ch.8960. Grange National Bank of Susquehanna County at New Milford. $5. 1929 T2. Fr.1800-2. No.A000120. Plate F. Very scarce “one-bank town”. Fine, with huge margins. Only $5 notes were issued by this bank in small size. A comparable note was offered as Lot 18031 by Heritage CAA in their April 21, 2008 sale, where it sold for $1,700.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

1058 1058

A Very Scarce Large Note from the Laceyville, PA Grange Bank PA. Laceyville. Ch.8845. Grange National Bank of Wyoming County at Laceyville. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 1800-1. No.F001062A. Plate L. XF, with a tight margins at the right side. A decent example from this “one-bank town,” a small borough of some 379 souls in Wyoming County. One of the more elusive issues from Pennsylvania's Grange banks, rare in large size and scarce in small size. This note was previously offered as Lot 2404 of Lyn Knight's March 11, 2006 sale, where it sold for $1,750.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

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1061 1061

PA. Parkers Landing. Ch.6045. First National Bank of Parkers Landing. $50. 1929 T1. Fr. 1803-1. No.C000169A. Plate I. VF-EF, with good margins. The Armstrong County "one-bank town" of Parkers Landing is sometimes referred to as "the smallest city in the U.S.". This bank only issued high denomination notes ($50 and $100), with the small size issue limited to a total of 1434 pieces. Est. 400-500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1065

1062 1062

PA. Philadelphia. Ch.570. Tradesmens National Bank And Trust Company, Philadelphia. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 598. No.32/32. Plate C. Crisp Uncirculated, with charter number embossing visible on the back. An ‘as made’ horizontal paper wrinkle can be observed through the upper part of the portrait. Bright and attractive, with printed signatures. This low serial numbered note bears this bank's scarcer second title, which only issued large notes for approximately one year during 1928 and 1929. Est. 400-600

1065

PA. Pittsburgh. Ch.E4918. National Bank of Western Pennsylvania at Pittsburgh. $10. 1882 DB. Fr. 540. No.E1020/10426. Plate H. Fine, with oversized stamped black signatures. Evenly worn, with good margins. Est. 400-600

A Group of Smethport Grange National Bank Notes

Scarce Philadelphia Neighborhood Bank

1066 1066

1063 1063

PA. Philadelphia. Ch.12860. Queen Lane National Bank in Germantown at Philadelphia. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 609. No.6734/6734. Plate B. Evenly circulated Fine, with a very tight lower margin and somewhat faded violet stamped signatures. Queen Lane is a north/south street connecting Germantown Ave. with Henry Ave., which is in the South Falls neighborhood. One of the most short-lived of Philadelphia's many 'neighborhood' banks, this institution was in business for less than three years, liquidating in October, 1928. This note was previously offered as Lot 20968 of Heritage CAA's Jan. 8, 2004 sale, where it realied $1,200.00. Est. 750-1000

1064

PA. Pittsburgh. Ch.685. Farmers Deposit National Bank of Pittsburgh. $100. 1929 T1. Fr. 1804-1. No.B001002A. Plate B. Crisp Uncirculated, with good margins. Only some very light teller handling and light ink rub at the lower right remove this from a Choice CU Grade. Est. 400-600

PA. Smethport. Ch.E8591. Grange National Bank of McKean County at Smethport. $5. 1902 PB. Fr. 600. No.T974374E/17118. Plate G. About Fine, with some dirt on the back. Black stamped signatures. A tiny piece out of the upper margin, near the upper left counter, is barely noticeable. The census shows only 12 large size notes for this charter. This note was previously offered as Lot 14208 of Heritage CAA's Sept.26, 2007 sale, where it fetched $2,200.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1250

1067 1067

PA. Smethport. Ch.E8591. Grange National Bank of McKean County at Smethport. $20. 1902 PB. Fr. 652. No.N725225E/10873. Plate B. Evenly circulated Fine, with bold stamped signatures. According to both of the prominent National Bank Note census, this is the first $20 1902 Plain Back from this bank to appear in numismatic venues. Est. 900-1500

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Rare Small Size Tioga Grange National Notes 1071

1068 1068

PA. Smethport. Ch.8591. Grange National Bank of McKean County at Smethport. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.E001313A. Plate E. PCGS Very Fine 20 Apparent ‘Repaired Edge Tear at Left’. Tight left margin. In Heritage CAA's January, 2012 FUN sale, this note fetched $950.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 18582. Est. 500-750

PA. Tioga. Ch.8092. Grange National Bank of Tioga. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.A000591A. Plate G. Attractive VF, with good margins. A rare small size note, with only five showing in the census. This note was previously offered as Lot 2439 in Lyn Knight's March 10, 2007 sale, where it fetched $2,900.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1200-1800

A Group of Very Scarce Troy Grange National Notes

1072 1069 1069

1072

PA. Spartansburg. Ch.9110. Grange National Bank of Spartansburg. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.C000604A. Plate C. Fine, with what appears to be an orange crayon mark on the front(see photo). In Heritage CAA's January, 2012 FUN sale, this note fetched $950.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 18582. The census shows only ten small size notes recorded for this charter. Est. 300-500

1073

1070 1070

PA. Spartansburg. Ch.9110. Grange National Bank of Spartansburg. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.B000171A. Plate H. A pleasing Fine, with excellent margins. This note was previously auctioned as Lot 1287 by R.M.Smythe in their June 19, 1998 sale, where it fetched $425.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 450-750

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PA. Troy. Ch.8849. Grange National Bank of Bradford County at Troy. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 626. No.8992/8992. Plate D. VF-XF, with great margins. Black pen cashier’s signature and black stamped president’s signature. Very clean and attractive. The census shows ten large size notes reported for this charter. A PCGS graded VF 35 PPQ brought $2,100.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 15369 of Heritage CAA's Aug.3, 2012 sale. Est. 1200-1800

1073

PA. Troy. Ch.8849. Grange National Bank of Bradford County at Troy. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.C001621A. Plate I. Fine-VF, but there is a ¼” tear in the upper margin. Fortunately, the upper margin is very ample, and the tear penetrates the border only slightly. Only eight small size notes are recorded in the census for this charter. A comparably graded note (but without the tear) fetched $900.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 15819 of Heritage CAA's Jan.12, 2008 sale. Est. 500-750


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1074 1074

PA. Troy. Ch.8849. Grange National Bank of Bradford County at Troy. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D000005A. Plate J. Evenly circulated VG-F. Est. 400-600

1077 1077

RI. Hopkinton. Ch.N1054. First National Bank of Hopkinton. $20. 1902 DB. Fr. 642. No.A622934A/2826. Plate B. VF, with a tight lower margin and a couple of pinholes. Attractive pen signatures. This bank was the only issuer in Hopkinton. It issued Original Series through 1902 Date Backs, before liquidating in May, 1914. This note was previously offered as Lot 5001 of Lyn Knight's June 28, 2008 sale, where it fetched $1,000.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 750-1000

1078

RI. Providence. Ch.1302. Providence National Bank. $20. 1929 T1. Fr. 1802-1. No.D005833A. Plate J. Choice Crisp Uncirculated, with spectacular embossing and good margins. Est. 150-250

1079

RI. Slatersville. Ch.1035. First National Bank of Smithfield. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.B000631A. Plate B. About Fine, with good margins. According to the Kelly reference, 'Slatersville' appears only on this bank's small size issues. This note was previously offered as Lot 2193 of Lyn Knight's Nov.19, 2005 sale, where it fetched $385.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 250-350

1080

SC. Columbia. Ch.S9687. Liberty National Bank of South Carolina at Columbia. $10. 1902 PB. Fr. 627. No.R949663D/3431. Plate B. Fine, with oversized black stamped signatures and good margins. The second title for this bank. An inexpensive large note from South Carolina’s state capital. A large size only issuer that went into receivership in March, 1926. The second title shows only 14 notes recorded in the census. Est. 300-500

1081

SC. Spartanburg. Ch.14211. Commercial National Bank of Spartanburg. $10. 1929 T2. Fr. 1801-2. No.A001603. Plate A. Crisp Uncirculated, with very obvious embossing, and a tight right margin. A small teller pinch in the upper margin is mainly noticeable on the back. One of the more obtainable 14000 charters. Est. 150-250

1082

SD. Watertown. Ch.2935. First National Bank And Trust Company of Watertown. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.D001761A. Plate J. VF, with a tight right margin. The second of this bank’s three titles. Est. 150-250

1075 1075

1076

Rare Small Size Ulysses, PA Grange Note PA. Ulysses. Ch.8739. Grange National Bank of Potter County at Ulysses. $5. 1929 T1. Fr. 1800-1. No.B000087A. Plate H. VG-Fine. Only seven small size notes appear in the census for this charter. This note was previously offered by Heritage CAA as Lot 13458 in their May 3, 2009 sale, where it fetched $3,250.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1500-2500 PA. West Chester. Ch.552. National Bank of Chester County And Trust Company. $5. 1929 T2. Fr. 18002. No.A000534. Plate F. VG-F, with good margins. The second title for this bank. Only seven small size notes appear in the census for this charter. Est. 60-90

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1087

1083 1083

SD. Yankton. Ch.9445. Dakota National Bank of Yankton. $50. 1902 PB. Fr. 677. No.1340/1340. Plate B. VF-EF, with good margins. The penned cashier’s signature is barely legible, but the president’s signature is gone. This bank issued only $50 and $100 notes in both large and small size. The census shows 19 large notes for this bank. Est. 750-1250

1084

TN. Nashville. Ch.150. Fourth And First National Bank of Nashville. $10. 1929 T1. Fr. 1801-1. No.C028610A. Plate I. Crisp Uncirculated, with very noticeable embossing. Slightly tight left margin. This note bears the second title of this capital city bank. Est. 150-250

1085

TX. Austin. Ch.4308. Austin National Bank. $20. 1929 T2. Fr.1802-2. No.A002173. Plate G. Crisp Uncirculated, with embossing and good margins. An inexpensive state capital note. Est. 150-250

1087

TX. San Antonio. Ch.13578. National Bank of Fort Sam Houston at San Antonio. $5. 1929 T1. Fr.1800-1. No.B000560A. Plate B. VF, with good margins. Est. 250-350

1088

UT. S alt Lake City. Ch.P4310. National Bank of the Republic at Salt Lake City. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.653. No.M934831D/30559. Plate B. VG-F, cut into the lower border at the left. The signatures are faded. This note was previously offered as Lot 3402 of Lyn Knight's Nov. 21, 2002 sale, where it fetched $400.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 400-600

1089 1089

UT. Salt Lake City. Ch.P4341. Utah State National Bank of Salt Lake City. $10. 1902 DB. Fr.620. No.A311407B/14053. Plate A. Fine/VF, with a tight upper margin and a few minor edge splits. A second title note with stamped signatures. Est. 400-600

1090

UT. Salt Lake City. Ch.P4310. National Bank of the Republic at Salt Lake City. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.653. No.U645177B/21849. Plate A. VF, with good margins. The violet stamped signatures are mostly faded. This bank only issued large size notes, and closed in Sept., 1922. This note was previously offered as Lot 3201 of Lyn Knight's March 19, 2005 sale, where it fetched $800.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 600-900

1086 1086

TX. Houston. Ch.1644. First National Bank of Houston. $100. 1902 DB. Fr.690. No.7158/7158. Plate C. Almost Unc. - Crisp Uncirculated, with a barely visible center fold. Graded Uncirculated in the census. Tight cut upper margin near the left corner. Stamped signatures. Est. 3000-4000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1091

UT. Salt Lake City. Ch.9403. Continental National Bank And Trust Company of Salt Lake City. $10. 1929 T2. Fr.1801-2. No.A014573. Plate K. VF, with good margins. The second title for this institution. Est. 100-150

1094 1094

1092 1092

VT. Montpelier. Ch.857. Montpelier National Bank. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.F000601A. Plate L. VF, with excellent margins. A very presentable state capital note. One of the more difficult to find state capitals in small size notes, as there were only two issuers of small size notes in Montpelier. A comparably graded note on this bank realized $375.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 2553 of Lyn Knight's March 10, 2007 sale. Est. 300-500

VA. Newport News. Ch.S11028. Schmelz National Bank of Newport News. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.658. No.U924596E/13444. Plate A. Fine, with a tight lower margin. Stamped signatures. H.L. and George A. Schmelz opened the Schmelz Brothers Bank in Newport News in 1891. (They also owned a private banking business in Hampton, Va from 1886-1903). George died in January, 1911, and the bank now just "Schmelz" was granted a federal charter in 1917. A comparable note was auctioned as Lot 12870 by Heritage CAA in their Aug.16, 2010 sale, which fetched $350.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 300-500

A Better State Capital Note

1093 1093

VT. Wells River. Ch.1406. National Bank of Newbury at Wells River. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.624. No.63908/63908. Plate R. A clean VF-XF, with charter number embossing on the back. The lower margin has been trimmed to the border. Stamped signatures. The second title for this bank. This note was previously auctioned as Lot 4712 in Lyn Knight's Nov. 23, 2003 sale, where it fetched $475.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 400-600

1095 1095

WA. Olympia. Ch.4297. Capital National Bank of Olympia. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.D000621A. Plate J. Evenly circulated Fine, with a light press. Olympia is one of the more elusive locations for state capital collectors. Of the city's three issuing banks, only the Capital National Bank has a quantity of surviving notes that can attempt to satisfy the demand. The other two banks are extremely rare. Consequently, notes of the Capital National Bank generally command higher prices than those of other banks of comparable rarity. This note was previously auctioned as Lot 3829 of heritage CAA's Jan. 10, 2002 sale, where it fetched $850.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1098

1096 1096

WA. Seattle. Ch.4229. Seattle National Bank. $100. 1902 DB. Fr.692. No.B129998/15014. Plate B. VFXF, with a tight lower margin, and a ¼” edge split at the top, about 1” to the left of the center. Clean, with bold black stamped signatures of the cashier and vice president. This bank only issued large size notes, and all of its 1902 series issues were of the $50 and $100 denomination. This note was previously auctioned as Lot 2033 of Lyn Knight's Dec.10, 2008 sale, where it sold for $3,600.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1500-2500

1098

1097 1097

WA. Seattle. Ch.4375. National Bank of Commerce of Seattle. $100. 1902 PB. Fr.701. No.B108550/666. Plate B. VF, with a very tight lower margin. A trace of violet teller stamp at the left side of the title on the front. The back has a partial teller stamp in red ink at the right. Pen signatures of the cashier and vice president. Previously offered as Lot 14515 of Heritage CAA's Sept.26, 2007 Sale, where it realized $2,200.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1200-1800

WA. Spokane. Ch.12418. Brotherhood’s Co-Operative National Bank of Spokane. $5. 1902 PB. Fr.609. No.29859/29859. Plate D. Crisp Uncirculated, with tight margins at the upper right and lower center. Corner tip fold at the upper left. Bright and attractive, with bold printed signatures. This bank was in business for about six years between 1923 and 1929, and issued only large size notes. Est. 1000-1500

1099 1099

WV. Charleston. Ch.3236. Charleston National Bank. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.C003015A. Plate I. Crisp Uncirculated, with good margins. Serial number embossing can be seen on the back. An inexpensive state capital note. Est. 150-250

1100 1100

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WV. Clarksburg. Ch.1530. Merchants National Bank of West Virginia at Clarksburg. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.651. No.21747/21747. Plate B. VF, with pen signatures. Est. 400-600


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1104

WV. Wheeling. Ch.1424. National Bank of West Virginia at Wheeling. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.624. No.109095/109095. Plate K. VF, with a rounded upper left corner and bold black printed signatures. Est. 150-250

1101 1101

WV. Clarksburg. Ch.S7029. Empire National Bank of Clarksburg. $20. 1902 DB. Fr.642. No.Y395061A/20475. Plate B. AU, with only a center bend and an upper right corner tip fold keeping it from a CU grade. Fresh and bright, with charter number embossing visible on the back. Violet stamped signatures. Est. 500-750

1102 1102

WV. Griffithsville. Ch.10097. Oil Field National Bank of Griffithsville. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.654. No.T704991H/2874. Plate A. VF-XF, with tight margins at the upper right and right. An attractive note, with an interesting title, and two-color signatures. The cashier’s signature is a blue stamp, the president’s signature is a violet stamp. Clean on both sides, with the exception of some light dirt beneath the Treasury seal near the lower right corner. A very scarce bank, with only nine large notes currently reported. Previously offered as Lot 3783 in Heritage CAA's May 17, 2002 Sale, where it sold for $1,900.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1200-1800

1103 1103

WV. Moorefield. Ch.S3029. South Branch Valley National Bank of Moorefield. $20. 1902 PB. Fr.650. No.R431903B/7953. Plate B. Fine-VF, with good margins. Violet stamped signatures. Est. 450-600

1105 1105

WV. Wheeling. Ch.S1424. National Bank of West Virginia at Wheeling. $20. 1902 RS. Fr.639. No.X849761/13360. Plate A. VF, with good margins and delicate violet stamped signatures. Although this bank has many large size survivors, the census only shows three 1902 Red Seals. A comparably graded $10 Red Seal was auctioned as Lot 3473 in Lyn Knight's Oct.15, 2010 sale, fetching $1,200.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1000-1500

1106

WV. Wheeling. Ch.1424. National Bank of West Virginia at Wheeling. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.E003751A. Plate E. XF-AU, with a few barely visible vertical folds, and excellent margins. Est. 120-180

1107

WV. Wheeling. Ch.1424. National Bank of West Virginia at Wheeling. $10. 1929 T2. Fr.1801-2. No.A002301. Plate I. VF, with good margins. Est. 100-150

1108

WV. Wheeling. Ch.1424. National Bank of West Virginia at Wheeling. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.624. No.120612/120612. Plate J. About Fine, with good margins and bold black printed signatures. Est. 100-150

1109

WI. Madison. Ch.144. First National Bank of Madison. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.C012310A. Plate C. Crisp Uncirculated, with a slightly tight lower margin. An inexpensive state capital note. Previously offered as Lot 3825 of Lyn Knight's June 12, 2004 sale, where it fetched $425.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 200-300

1110

WI. Wisconsin Rapids. Ch.4639. Wood County National Bank of Wisconsin Rapids. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.B001642A. Plate H. Crisp Uncirculated. Est. 150-250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1111 1111

WY. Cheyenne. Ch.11380. American National Bank of Cheyenne. $5. 1902 PB. Fr.606. No. 10319/10319. Plate C. VF, clean and attractive, with violet stamped signatures. A good note for a state capital set. A comparably graded $5 1902 PB from this bank brought $2,300.00 plus the buyer's premium as Lot 6083 of Bowers & Merena's Nov.17, 2007 sale. Est. 1500-2500

1114 1114

1112 1112

WY. Green River. Ch.10698. First National Bank of Green River. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.631. No.8538/8538. Plate B. Attractive Fine, with good color and contrast. Vivid violet stamped signatures. Tightly cut lower margin. A scarce bank in large size, with only 13 notes reported in the census. A comparably graded $10 1902 PB was auctioned by Heritage CAA as Lot 18238 of their Jan.10, 2011 sale, fetching $1,600.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 1500-2500

WY. Laramie. Ch.3615. Albany National Bank, Laramie. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.F000577A. Plate F. VF, with a light press. The second title for this bank. This note was previously offered as Lot 3328 of Lyn Knight's March 19, 2005 sale, where it fetched $900.00 plus the buyer's premium. Est. 300-500

1115 1115

WY. Laramie. Ch.4989. First National Bank of Laramie. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.E001335A. Plate K. Fine, cut to the border at the lower right corner. Three pinholes. Est. 300-450

1116 1116 1113 1113

WY. Laramie. Ch.3615. Albany National Bank, Laramie. $10. 1929 T1. Fr.1801-1. No.C001466A. Plate I. VF. The second title on this bank. Est. 300-500

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WY. Rawlins. Ch.4320. First National Bank of Rawlins. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.627. No.N628366H/6694. Plate A. VF, with most of the lower margin gone. An attractive and clean note with vivid violet stamped signatures of the cashier and vice president. Est. 1000-1500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1117 1117

WY. Rawlins. Ch.5413. Rawlins National Bank. $20. 1929 T1. Fr.1802-1. No.E000883A. Plate K. VF, with a rounded lower right corner and a top edge that looks like it was torn with a straight edge. Est. 300-500

1120 1120

WY. Sheridan. Ch.4604. First National Bank of Sheridan. $20. 1929 T2. Fr.1802-2. No.A000362. Plate B. VF, with a slightly tight right margin.Est. 300-500

1121

CA. San Francisco. Ch. 1741. Crocker National Bank of San Francisco. $5 1902 PB. Fr. 601. No. 813729. Plate K. VF, with some soiling on the back folds. Est. 200-300

1118 1118

WY. Rock Springs. Ch.W4755. Rock Springs National Bank. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.628. No.N976041B/3043. Plate C. VF, with good margins. Black stamped signatures. The cashier’s signature is stamped twice, once on the signature line and once on the border below the line. This note was formerly part of the Peter Huntoon Wyoming Collection. Est. 1200-1800

1122 1122

NY. Hartwick. Ch. 11657. Hartwick National Bank. $10 1902 PB. Fr.633. No. 4205. Plate C. VF, with a portion of a teller stamp above the left signature. This is only the third $10 PB reported on this bank. A similar example, without the teller’s stamp, brought over $4,000 in the October 2012 Heritage sale. Est. 2500-3500

1119 1119

WY. Sheridan. Ch.4604. First National Bank of Sheridan. $10. 1902 PB. Fr.627. No.15506/15506. Plate C. VF, but there are two holes in the upper part of the note, about ¼” to ½” below the upper edge(slightly larger than pinholes). One is in the obligation at the left, the other is just above the upper right serial number. Bright red stamped signatures. Est. 1000-1500

1123 1123

PA. Pittsburgh. Ch. 252. First National Bank of Pittsburgh. $5 1902 PB. Fr.606. No. 813729. Plate K. VF, with some staining in the corners. Est. 200-300

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

AUTOGRAPHS

A Final Offering of Treasure Trove Items Relating to General George Armstrong Custer (Note: portions of this introductory text are repeated from our August 2012 Collector’s Series Sale where we sold the first part of the Custer treasure trove.) A young lady walked into our offices on West 57th Street in New York. She placed a shoe box on the table and she said that the contents of the box all related to George Armstrong Custer, the Civil War hero and legendary Indian fighter who died in the Battle of the Little Big Horn. She opened the box and began showing me the contents. Two things became crystal clear - she understood the significance of each item, and she was knowledgeable and passionate about the life and times of General Custer and his wife, “Libbie.” The box contained checks, drafts, military orders, and the Custer’s personal account book. There were several stamped envelopes that had previously contained personal correspondence sent from the General to his wife and from her to him. She showed me a letter written entirely in the General’s hand. The last items to come out of the box were some medals and badges. She picked up the final object, placed it in my hand, and said “This just may be Libbie Custer’s own Michigan 7th Cavalry Regimental badge, given to her by the General himself. Libbie Custer describes it in her book, Tenting on the Plains, and she is seen wearing it in several photographs.” My instincts told me that this could well be a very significant item, but was it really what she thought it might be? I had to ask the question that was on mind from the moment the box was opened “How did you come into possession of these items? What follows is a condensed version of what she told me: “Elizabeth Bacon Custer long outlived her husband, General George Armstrong Custer. She made her primary residence at 71 Park Avenue in New York City. Elizabeth and the General had no children, and the majority of her family resided in or around Monroe, Michigan, save for a niece in Brooklyn. As was customary back in that time, Ms. Custer had a personal assistant (referred to frequently in news articles and other writings as a "companion" or a maid) named Margaret Flood. Margaret lived with Elizabeth until Elizabeth’s death at age 91 in 1933. When she originally began working for Elizabeth, Margaret was single and I'm sure her maiden name is somewhere in all of the notes and letters I have. However, she later married and her husband, Patrick Flood, moved in with them. I have a letter from Mrs. Custer to Patrick, asking what his intentions are for Margaret. Margaret and Elizabeth were extremely close, as evidenced by the many pieces of personal correspondence I have. Most helpful are the letters Elizabeth wrote to Margaret while she was down in Daytona, Florida for a short period, recuperating from an illness. Margaret was left a number of things upon Elizabeth's death, though I would assume they were nothing thought to be of particular value, at least at the time. I have a letter from an attorney to Margaret does identify that this occurred. I do know Elizabeth donated General Custer's items of significance to West Point,

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such as his medal of honor, his sword, etc. She also donated other items, such as a desk, to the Custer Museum. Elizabeth published the many letters she received from General Custer during wartime. The book, "The Custer Story: The Life and Intimate Letters of General George A. Custer and His Wife Elizabeth," was written by Margeurite Merington at Elizabeth's urging. It took many years and was finally completed in 1950. The whereabouts of the original letters are unknown. However, the envelopes, along with notebooks, stamps, and photos, were stored in a large cardboard box that ended up in the house in Brooklyn with Margaret and Patrick. Many of the envelopes have Margaret Flood's handwriting on them; I would assume she helped Merington over the years in sorting through the letters. Likewise, as Merington completed the book in 1950, many years after Elizabeth's passing, it seems likely that she would have returned them to Margaret and Patrick. Elizabeth had no heirs, Margaret was still alive, and she was like family to Elizabeth. Similar to the Custers, Margaret and Patrick Flood also had no children. However, Margaret did have a niece - her sister's daughter, Mary - who moved into the Brooklyn house to care for them as they grew old. When the Floods died, they left their house and its contents to Mary, who lived there for the rest of her life. She also had no children. My family came to know Mary many years ago when I was a young child. She was the aunt by marriage of a family friend. I came to know her as "Aunt Mary" while I was growing up, though she was of no blood relation to me. My parents remained close to Aunt Mary and saw her as regularly as if she were related to us. As Aunt Mary advanced in age, my mother visited her more frequently. On one of many visits in the mid 2000s, Aunt Mary gave my mother the box containing the envelopes and a box of Elizabeth Custer's personal effects. (She thought I would be interested in the envelopes and stamps because I liked "old things".) In a smaller box were some old war medals. Nothing terribly exciting, at least to any of us. These boxes had sat in her hall closet for many years and I guess Aunt Mary no longer wanted them. In fact, the box containing the envelopes had long ago suffered water damage; I still have it in all its glory, as I stored its contents in it for the many years since. Mary gave us the boxes before she passed away in 2007. My mother was appointed by Aunt Mary's will as her executor, and she settled Mary's affairs as Aunt Mary had directed her to, including the sale of the house. I was given a box of "old things" and my mother was given a box of personal effects by my "Aunt" who was of no relation to me by blood but was as close as family. My parents cared for her in her elder years, just as she had cared for her elderly aunt and uncle - who just happened to be the caretakers of Elizabeth Custer in her elder years. In a way, the envelopes are of most interest to me, as the letters they once contained showed the devotion of a man to his wife, and they were passed along in a chain of caring over the years. ” Before our August 2012 auction our consignor was undecided about selling the entire contents of the box. She chose to give us all of the medals and badges, and a representative sampling of the documents and photographs. As she previously stated, her personal interest was in the envelopes, and she indicated that she would perhaps keep all of the remaining items. The results of our August 2012 sale showed her that there was a great deal of interest in Custer material. This convinced her that the rest of the items would find willing buyers who were as caring and passionate about Libbie and General Custer as our consignor was. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to obtain these important Custer items. Again, we wish to thank John Beckendorf for his invaluable help, and for the wonderful article her wrote about the Custer badges in the Spring 2013 edition of the SPINK INSIDER.


1124

1125

May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1124 Custer, George Armstrong. Desirable Autograph Document Signed “George A. Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 4to, Topeka, KS, November 1, 1870. A partly printed promissory note in which Custer agrees to pay within three months “Four Hundred Dollars with interest at ten per cent / Value received, This note is secured by a mortgage legally stamped.” Lovely vignette of Liberty with cap, flag, and fasces at left; dog below. Black on blue paper, signed in blue ink. Very lightly machine canceled over signature. Edge wear, VG. This note may relate to entries in Custer’s ledger book (which we sold in our August 2012 Collector’s Series Auction). Clearly Custer and other officers were investing in land just as the railroads - in this case, probably the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe - were reaching into the former wilderness. One of only two known to us. The other example (Lot 1080 in our August 2012), perhaps a shade nicer, realized $6,250. Est. 3500-5000

1125 Custer, George Armstrong. 1) “G. A. Custer” autograph. A fragment of a document. “7th Cavalry” /, “Lieutenant Colonel 7th Cavalry / Brevrt Maj General.” The edges are ragged, but the signature is very large and bold. 2) George Armstrong Custer Print by Barry. George Armstrong Custer in white shirt and tie. Sepia print on matte paper. 6” x 8 .” 3) 12page self cover pamphlet, Westchester - Hudson River - West Point by Charles Francis Bates with General Custer on the cover. The last two items were found in the “Custer shoebox” stuck together. There is some damage around the edge of the print that occurred when it was removed from back of the pamphlet, and the pamphlet has some water stains and light damage as well. 4) The Last Battle of the Sioux Nation by Usher L. Burdick, Worzalla Publishing, 1929. Signed by D. F. Barry, famous Western photographer, on the day before the stock market crash. Photos of the General and Mrs. Custer appear in the book. Very Fine condition. 5) D. F. Barry’s Catalogue of Noted Indian Chiefs. 16pp. The cover is missing a small piece, but otherwise quite nice. Est. 1000-1500

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1127 1127

Custer, George Armstrong. [2] 1) Photograph, perhaps previously unpublished, of Elizabeth Custer, wife of George Armstrong Custer. 4” x 6.” Mounted on a card. Seated at right, dressed in a full length, black dress is Elizabeth Custer. Standing, left, wearing a diagonally-striped dress is Custer’s sister Margaret Custer Calhoun. A piece of paper is pasted to the back of the card and it reads. “427 West 11th St Kansas City Mo. Jan 1917. Madam, I am returning the picture that my daughter got in Lincoln, I found in my trunk that has been around the world and San Francisco, and that … N. Y. via the Suez Canal. I think maybe you would like to have it. Very respectfully Thomas Travis 7th Cav. 1876”. The image is stained at right, otherwise clear and sharp. The back of the card has some stains, and the corners are rounded. 2) Envelope with a note dated on Executive Mansion stationary addressed to “Mrs. Gen Custer / 41 East 10th St. thanking Mrs. Custer for a gift she gave to “Mr. Harrison.” Postmarked 3-22-89. Est. 1000-1500

Custer's Spanish Sword

1128 1128

Custer, George Armstrong. Custer, Elizabeth. [4] 1) Envelope addressed to “Mrs. Genl G A Custer / Monroe (crossed out) Ft. Leavenworth Mich (crossed out)/ Kas.” Written in Custer’s hand, thus a virtual autograph. The end of the envelope is torn, but this does not affect the really nice signature. A few scattered stains. 2) Note in Elizabeth Custer’s hand, with text referring to the General’s Spanish sword, donated to West Point. “Motto on General Custer’s Spanish Sword / Motto on General Custer’s captured Spanish Sword/ Do not draw me Without cause / Do not sheathe me without honor.” 3) Pencil rubbing of the General’s initials, “GC” on the sword. 4) Newspaper clipping relating to “Custer’s relics.” Est. 1000-1500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1129 1129

Custer, George Armstrong. Interesting Autograph Document Signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Sep. 24, 1872. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Grinstead & Bradley or order / Two hundred Dollars.” Transferred on verso. Spindle cancel at the center, and three small spindle holes at left, not near writing, otherwise EF. Grinstead and Bradley were bankers. All entries in medium brown ink, well executed by the General. There is a partial fingerprint at the top which may very well have been the General’s! One of the nicest of the remaining examples. Est. 3000-5000 1130

1130

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, March 1, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Cash / Fifty Dollars.” Transferred on verso. Spindle cancel at the center, and “OK” in pencil, a hard fold near the top, and a small smudge, upper right, otherwise VF. All entries in deep brown ink, boldly signed by the General. Est. 2000-3000

1131 1131

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, March 3, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Galt House / Fifteen Dollars.” Endorsed on verso. Spindle cancel at the center, one small spindle hole, left, and some very light ink “shadows” from contact with another check, otherwise Almost New. Galt House was a popular Louisville Hotel where Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, and George Armstrong Custer overnighted at one time or another. All entries are in deep brown ink, clearly and carefully executed by General Custer. Est. 1000-2500

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1132 1132

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, March 1, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Galt House / Twenty-Five Dollars.” Endorsements on verso. Spindle cancel at the center, one small spindle hole, left, and a small smudge, upper left, otherwise EF. All entries are in lighter brown ink by General Custer. Est. 1500-2500

1133 1133

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Oct. 4, 1872. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “First National Bank Nashville / Three Hundred and Sixty-Five Dollars.” Endorsements on verso. Spindle cancel at the center, one small spindle hole, left, otherwise VF-EF. Est. 1000-1500

1134 1134

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Feb. 26, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “John Morera / Twenty-Three & 50/100 Dollars.” Endorsement on the back, and some very light bleed through. Spindle cancel at the center, otherwise EF. All entries are in purple indelible ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1135 1135

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Mar. 4, 1873... Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Cash / Fifty Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center, otherwise VF. All entries are in blurry medium brown ink by General Custer. Either the General, or his pen was not in the best of form this day. Est. 500-750

1136 1136

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Sept. 5, 1872. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Cash / Thirty Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center, small spindle hole, left, and a light stain left behind when the revenue stamp was removed, otherwise EF. All entries are in medium brown ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

His Troops Discovered Custer's Body at the Battle of Little Big Horn

1137 1137

[Custer, George Armstrong. Terry, Alfred Howe.] Note written in pencil by General Terry. No date. Approximately 4” x 6 ½.” Quarter folded, with the right edge ragged. “Genl Custer” on one of the back panels. “Dear General, Will you be so good as to come to my quarters / Yours truly A. H. Terry” Terry commanded troops marching westward towards the Battle of the Little Big Horn. They arrived after the battle and were the first to discover that General Custer and his troops had been massacred. Est. 500-750

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Custer Addresses His Men at Appomattox

1138 1138

[Custer, George Armstrong.] Important printed Military Orders signed in type “G. A. Custer / Brevet Major General Commanding,” 1 page, 8vo, Headquarters Third Cavalry Division, Appomattox Court House, VA, April 9, 1865. On the very day that Custer was present for the surrender of the armies of Robert E Lee, he addresses his men: “With profound gratitude toward the God of battles, by whose blessings our enemies have been humbled and our arms rendered triumphant, your Commanding General avails himself of this his first opportunity to express his admiration of the heroic manner in which you have passed through the series of battles which to-day resulted in the surrender of the enemy’s entire army. The record established by your indomitable courage is unparalleled in the annals of war...During the past six months...you have captured from the enemy, in open battle, one hundred and eleven pieces of field artillery, sixty-five battle-flags, and upwards of ten thousand prisoners...You have never lost a gun, never lost a color, and have never been defeated...When the war is ended and the task of the historian begins...I only ask that my name may be written as that of the Commander of the Third Cavalry Division.” This document was quoted entirely by Whittaker in his 1876 biography of Custer. Light damp stain at left edge, toned, edge wear including bumped top corners, VG. The time to which Custer refers included the Valley Campaigns of 1864, in which his forces under Gen Philip Sheridan helped defeat Jubal Early’s army; the siege of Petersburg; and the final chase of Lee’s armies across Virginia to Appomattox Court House. One of three discovered in the “Shoe Box”. A similar example sold for $3,500 in our August 2012 Collector’s Series Sale. The only other example is not being offered for sale by our consignor. Est. 2000-4000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1139 1139

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Mar. 3, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Cash / Ten Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center, small spindle hole, left, and a light stain left behind when the revenue stamp was removed, otherwise EF. All entries are in medium brown ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

1140 1140

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Feb. 27, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “R. W. Preston / Twenty-Five Dollars.” Endorsements on the back. Spindle cancel at the center, small spindle hole, left, and a light stain left behind when the revenue stamp was removed. “683” written, left. otherwise EF. All entries are in medium brown ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

1141

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Feb. 15, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “John Ranch / Ninety-Two Dollars.” Endorsements on the back, and some light bleed through. Spindle cancel at the center, small spindle hole, left, otherwise VF. All entries are in medium brown ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

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1142 1142

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY, Mar. 4, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Merchants Bank of Ky / One Hundred & Twenty Dollars.” Endorsement on the back. Spindle cancel at the center, another near the “l” in “Planter’s,” otherwise EF. All entries are in light purple indelible ink by General Custer. Est. 1000-1500

Pair of Custer Signed Checks with Impairments

1143 1143

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. 1) Mar. 4, 1873. Blue bank check drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville, payable to “Cash / Ninety Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center; torn, rejoined with paper reinforcement, otherwise VF. All entries are in medium brown ink by General Custer. Perfectly suitable for framing. 2) Similar. $31. Payable to “Cash.” Spindle cancel at the center, “OK” in pencil. Lower right corner missing, but not affecting the signature. [2] Est. 500-1000

Another Pair of Custer Signed Checks with Impairments

1144 1144

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Blue bank checks drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville. Both payable to Thomas Polk & co. 1) Mar. 30, 1872 “Six Hundred Dollars.” Spindle cancels and pin holes, stain from stamp removal, bleed through from back endorsements, otherwise VF. All entries are in light brown ink by General Custer. 2) Similar. Feb. 21, 1873. “Ten Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center, and elsewhere, bleed through from back endorsements, otherwise EF. Signed by Custer in light brown ink. Both signatures are affected by bleed through. [2] Est. 500-1000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Trio of Custer Signed Checks Executed in Indelible Ink

1145 1145

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Blue bank checks drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville. 1) Feb. 26, 1873. Payable to “ Walton & Bros / Eighteen and 25/100 Dollars.” Spindle cancel at center, bleed through from back endorsement, light stain from stamp removal, otherwise VF. 2) Similar. 1/8/1873. Payable to “Thomas & Boyd / Nineteen Dollars.” Spindle cancel at the center, “OK” in pencil. A stain in the right margin, otherwise VF-EF. 3) Mar. 4, 1873. Payable to Thomas Polk & Co. / Twenty-Five Dollars.” Spindle cancels, pin holes, bleed through from back endorsements, otherwise VF-EF. Two of the Custer signatures are affected by cancels, one is unmolested.[3] Est. 500-1000

Trio of Custer Signed Checks with Clear Signatures

1146 1146

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,”1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Blue bank checks drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville. 1) Sep. 20, 1872. Payable to “Grindstead & Bradley / Fifteen Hundred Dollars.” Spindle cancels at center and elsewhere, bleed through from back endorsement, otherwise EF. 2) Similar. Sep. 24, 1872. Payable to “Grindstead & Bradley / Three Hundred and Fifty-One Dollars and a quarter.” Spindle cancel at the center, endorsements on front and back, stain, otherwise VF. 3) Feb. 15, 1873. Payable to Thomas Polk & Co. / Fifteen Dollars.” Spindle cancels, pin holes, bleed through from back endorsements, otherwise VF-EF. All three with crystal clear Custer signatures. [3] Est. 750-1250

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Unique Pairing of Custer Checks

1149

1147 1147

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Planters National Bank, written over a green First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, U. S. Depositary check. Oct. 5, 1872. Payable to “Cash J; H. Fulton & Co., or order.” “Four Hundred and Fifty Dollars. Signed by General Custer. Spindle and hole cancels, bleed through from back endorsements. The lower left corner is missing, but it barely affects the General’s signature. The only check of its kind in this grouping. Est. 300-500

1149

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal check signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Blue bank check from the Planters National Bank of Louisville. The title, date and payee have been crossed out and replaced. The entries in George Armstrong Custer’s hand now read “Monroe, Mich June 30th 1873.” The check is payable to “George Cadwallader at The First National Bank of Monroe Mich or order / Three Hundred” Dollars. This is attached to a green check dated March 25, 1872 from A. A. Wheeler to G. A. Custer for $426.50.[2] Est. 300-500

Trio of Custer Signed Checks with Impairments

1150 1150 1148 1148

Custer, George Armstrong. Personal checks signed “GA Custer,” 1 page, narrow oblong 8vo, Louisville, KY. Blue bank checks drawn on the Planters National Bank of Louisville. All 1873. These have heavy bleed through from back endorsements, but the Custer signatures are still easily identifiable. [3] Est. 300-500

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[Custer, George Armstrong.] Photographic Images Taken at the June 25th, 1926 50th Anniversary of the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and others Relating to the West. [7]. 1) 3 ½ x 5” black and white print of three men identified as Lieutenant Daniel Newell, W. C. Slaper, and William E. Morris. All served under Major Reno. 2) 3 ½ x 5” black and white print of William C. Slaper standing at the edge of the Little Big Horn River. 3) 7th Cavalry Troopers at Camp at Crow Agency, Montana. 4) 3 ½ x 5 ½” sepia print of two men identified as” Bronson & Charlee” standing by monuments. 5) 3 x 4” black and white print of Harney Peak. On the back is noted “The Custer Expedition - 1874 Harney Peak at a Distance of about ten miles.” 6) 3 ½ x 2 ½” black and white print labeled “Crow Indian Mission, Crow Agency, Mon.” #261. 7) Carte de Visite labeled “Battle Flag of Horse Battery W. 2nd Arty.” Est. 300-500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Collection of Photos Relating to Elizabeth Custer

Custer Autograph and Related Items 1152

1151 1151

[Custer, Elizabeth]. 1) Sepia print, 3” x 4” on Velox paper. Elderly Elizabeth Custer seated in the parlor. 2) 6 x 4” sepia print of elderly Mrs. Custer on shipboard. 3-6) 3 ½ x 3 ½” black and white prints of elderly Mrs. Custer seated on the porch of the Monroe, Michigan house. These are numbered “259” on the back. Two are stuck together at the tops. She probably gave these out as souvenirs to visitors. 7-10) Three photos and a postcard of the “Summer House” in Monroe, Michigan. 11) 4 ½ x 3 ½ sepia print of the Grand Rapids, Michigan home of Judge Daniel S. Bacon, the house she grew up in. The history of the house is written on the back. [11] Est. 300-500

Custer, George Armstrong. 1) Signature of George Armstrong Custer on a fragment of a yellow envelope postmarked “DETROIT NOV 20.” The tops of the “G” and “A” are present, and “Custer” is complete except for the bottom of the “C.” 2) Cut out portion of an envelope with the free frank of J. D. Doty, “Delegate.” Doty served in the Michigan territorial legislature (1833-1835), as delegate in Congress from the Wisconsin Territory (1838-1841). In 1861 Lincoln appointed him to the difficult post of superintendent of Indian affairs for the Utah Territory. 3-4) Western Union Telegraph forms dated 1875 with messages to Mrs. Custer from the General, in a clerk’s hand. 5) Menu from a lunch at Bagg’s Hotel in Utica, NY. 8/31/1866. “LUNCH TO President Andrew Johnson AND PARTY.” 6) Receipt issued to Geo G Custar (SIC). Louisville, KY. 3/8/73. In payment for a Singer sewing machine. 7) Receipt issued to G. A. Custer for land purchased in Ogden, Kansas. 10/20/69. Some stains and edge nibbles. 8) Receipt for a silk dress purchased by Gen G. A. Custer. Chicago. 1875. Torn and rejoined. 9) Letter written in pencil by C. H. Dyer. San Antonio. 12/6/61. To Major M. F. Hale re-assigning him to General Custer. 10) Planters National Bank of Louisville. Credit statement. 2/13/73. To G. A. Custer, Esqr. 11) American Express Company receipt. Chicago. May 27, 18__. $40. Stamped “VALUE ASKED & NOT GIVEN.” Also included are a few newspaper clippings relating to General Custer. [11] Est. 200-300

1153 1153

Custer, George Armstrong. Autograph Endorsement. “Camp Sturgis DT / May 4th, 1873 / Approved / GA Custer/Bvt Major General USA/ Col 7th Cav /Comdg” on folded verso of a lined legal folio sheet. Two forms are pasted to the inside of the document, both from the Headquarters Department of Dakota, May 14th and June 3rd, 1873. The matter at hand seems to be a request for new tents to replace damaged ones. Brigadier General Bard suggests that the damaged tents should first be inspected. The matter is respectfully referred to the Chief Quartermaster by command of Brigadier General Terry. When General Custer found himself in deep trouble because of his political activities, it was Terry who came to his aid. VF, with some minor ink smearing in the General’s signature. Est. 1500-2500

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1154 1154

Custer, George Armstrong. Autographed lined legal folio folded in thirds. On the verso, “Fort Hays Kansas / April 29th 1867 / Rec’d this day. A letter had already been forwarded to the enclosed address / G A Custer / Bmaj Genl / U.S.A.” Written eight months before his involvement in the controversial Battle of Washita. Est. 1000-1500

1155 1155

Custer, George Armstrong. Envelope addressed to “Mrs. Genl GA Custer / Fort Leavenworth /Kas” in the General’s hand. Archivist’s note in pencil “Nov 23 / 68.” The right end is torn open, and there is a tear in the lower right corner. In November 1868, U.S. Army cavalry and infantry troops from forts Bascom in New Mexico, Lyon in Colorado, and Dodge in Kansas, were ordered to converge on the Indian Territory and strike the Southern Cheyenne and the Southern Arapaho. The main force was the Seventh Cavalry led by Lt. Col. George A. Custer. While the other columns were delayed, Custer’s Seventh Cavalry set out alone on November 23, the day the letter once contained in this envelope was written. The ensuing Battle of Washita River on November 27, 1868 was regarded as the first substantial U.S. victory in the Southern Plains War. Custer reported killing 103 warriors, but the Cheyenne said that their casualties were substantially lower. Est. 500-1000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1156 1156

Custer, George Armstrong. Five envelops addressed to “Mrs. Genl GA Custer” in the General’s hand. Some have archivist’s notes in pencil indicating the date of the letters the envelopes once contained. These range from the end of October to November 1868, leading up to the Battle of Washita. One October and one November envelope have “Monroe Mich” crossed out and “Fort Leavenworth Kas” added. The right ends are torn away, but the Custer signatures are all complete. Please note that these are signed “Mrs. Genl GA Custer.” Only about a dozen envelopes in the entire collection were written with “Mrs. Genl GA Custer” rather than “Mrs. Genl Custer.”[5] Est. 1000-1500

1157 1157

Custer, George Armstrong. Five envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl GA Custer” in the General’s hand. Some with archivist’s notes in pencil indicating the date of the letters the envelopes once contained. These range from October 1868 to June 1869. Most just precede the Battle of Washita. The addresses are Monroe, Michigan, Gross Isle, Michigan and Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, documenting Libbie Custer’s travels to be with the General as much as possible. The right ends are torn away on two, but the Custer signatures are all complete. Please note that these are signed “Mrs. Genl GA Custer” rather than “Mrs. Genl Custer,” (the way he addressed his later letters to her.) [5] Est. 1500-2500

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Custer Asks For and Receives the Hand of Libbie Bacon in Marriage

1158 1158

Custer, George Armstrong. 1) 2 ½” x 3 3/4” sepia print of D. S. Bacon. Mounted on a card, with shaved corners. This was perhaps the Judge’s calling card given Custer when he was formally introduced to his future son-in-law in November of 1862. “Hon. D. S. Bacon / Monroe, Michigan / 1862.” Custer married Elizabeth Clift Bacon on February 9, 1864. Both Elizabeth and her father were not initially impressed with him, but that would change with his promotion to the rank of brevet brigadier general. 2) Envelope said to have once contained a letter written by Custer asking her father for her hand in marriage (see archivists notation in pencil at left). “Hon. D. S. Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelope, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. Minor stains, but otherwise Very Fine. 3) Similar, once containing a letter thanking the Judge for his consent (per penciled notation of archivist). [3] Est. 1000-1500

Pre-Nuptial Love Letters to Libbie

1159 1159

Custer, George Armstrong. Four envelopes addressed to Miss Libbie Bacon and mailed between December 1863 and January 1864. Since Custer married Elizabeth Clift Bacon on February 9, 1864, we can well imagine what the contents of the letters that travelled in these envelopes were like. All with “Miss Libbie Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelopes, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. All in excellent condition. [4] Est. 750-1250

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

A Similar Group of Pre-Nuptial Love Letters to Libbie

1160 1160

Custer, George Armstrong. Four envelopes addressed to Miss Libbie Bacon and mailed between December 1863 and January 1864. Custer married Elizabeth Clift Bacon on February 9, 1864, so we can well imagine what the contents of the letters that travelled in these envelopes were like. All with “Miss Libbie Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelopes, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. All in excellent condition. [4] Est. 1000-1500

More Pre-Nuptial Love Letters to Libbie

1161 1161

Custer, George Armstrong. Six envelopes addressed to Miss Libbie Bacon and mailed between November 1863 and January 1864. Custer married Elizabeth Clift Bacon on February 9, 1864, so we can well imagine what the contents of the letters that travelled in these envelopes were like. All with “Miss Libbie Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelopes, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. One in fairly decent condition, but several have some impairment. Sold as is. [6] Est. 500-750

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1162 1162

Custer, George Armstrong. Six more envelopes addressed to Miss Libbie Bacon and mailed between November 1863 and January 1864. Custer married Libbie February 9, 1864, so we can well imagine what the contents of the letters that travelled in these envelopes were like. All with “Miss Libbie Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelopes, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. One in fairly decent condition, but several have some impairment. Sold as is. [6] Est. 500-750

More Pre-Nuptial Love Letters to Libbie

1163 1163

Custer, George Armstrong. Six additional envelopes addressed to Miss Libbie Bacon and mailed between November 1863 and January 1864. Custer married Libbie February 9, 1864, so we can well imagine what the contents of the letters that travelled in these envelopes were like. All with “Miss Libbie Bacon / Monroe / Michigan” written in ink on the front of the envelopes, all in Custer’s distinctive hand. One in fairly decent condition, but several have some impairments. Sold as is. [6] Est. 500-750

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1166

1164 1164

Custer, George Armstrong. Four envelopes addressed to the Honorable D. S. Bacon (Custer’s father-in-law) all in Custer’s hand. Two with Civil War dates indicated in the postal cancellations. One carried on the Steamer Allegany from Alexandria, and franked “New Orleans”. One in excellent condition, the other three have some faults. All are in Custer’s distinctive hand. [4] Est. 800-1200

1166

Addressed to Custer’s Brother

Custer, George Armstrong. A Group of Nine Official Army Envelopes, All Addressed to Mrs. Genl Custer (a few: “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”). Five are Headquarters Third Division, Cavalry Corps Official Business envelopes, two written in pencil. One is in a Head Quarters, Army of the Potomac envelope with “OFFICIAL BUSINESS” crossed out. The last three are Headquarters Department of Missouri envelopes, one “IN THE FIELD.” All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Several are somewhat tattered and stained around the edges, but the Custer autographs are intact and distinct. These are the last of the military envelopes in the “shoe box” collection. [9] Est. 1000-1500

1165 1165

Custer, George Armstrong. Two envelopes addressed by Custer to his brother, Colonel Tom Custer; all in General Custer's hand. The return address on both is the Hotel Brunswick, New York. Both with "Col Tom Custer / Fort Lincoln / Dakota" as the recipient, written in General Custer's distinctive hand. Both with the right end of the envelopes ripped off, and both are somewhat tattered and stained. A twotime recipient of the Medal of Honor, Tom died along with the General in the Battle of the Little Big Horn.[2] Est. 400-600

1167 1167

Custer, George Armstrong. A group of five envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. Four at “339 Penn Ave / Washington, DC.” One “Monroe / Mich.” All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. These are some of the nicer examples from the “shoe box” collection as the sides are not ragged. [5] Est. 1500-2500

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1170 1168 1168

1170

Custer, George Armstrong. Another group of five envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. Four at “Monroe / Mich.” One at “339 Penn Ave / Washington, DC.” All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Not quite as nice as the previous groupings, but still quite attractive. One end torn away. Excellent signatures. [5] Est. 1200-1800

Custer, George Armstrong. A group of seven envelopes addressed to “Mrs. General Custer”. Three at “339 Penn Ave / Washington, DC.” Four at “Monroe / Mich.” All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. One end is neatly torn away on each envelope. The signatures are excellent. [7] Est. 1500-2500

1171 1171 1169 1169

Custer, George Armstrong. A third group of five envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. Locations are Monroe, Fort Riley, Elizabethtown, Cleveland and Washington, DC. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four have one end torn away. Excellent signatures. [5] Est. 1000-1500

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Custer, George Armstrong. A group of nine envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. All with graphic vignettes or advertising on the left side: St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans; Phoenix Hotel, Lexington, KY; Barker & Co. Detroit, MI; Leland Hotel, Springfield, IL; Gilsey House, NY. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Several have condition problems and they should be carefully examined. Most of the signatures are complete. Sold as is. [9] Est. 1200-1800


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1172

Custer, George Armstrong. A grouping of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” - one “Mrs Genl GA Custer”. At five locations: Louisville, KY; Ft. Riley; Monroe, MI; Canandaigua, NY; and “339 Penn Ave”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. The envelopes all have condition problems and they should be carefully examined, but signatures are complete and attractive. Sold as is. [10] Est. 1000-1500

1174 1174 1173 1173

Custer, George Armstrong. Ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four locations are represented - Monroe, MI; Grand Rapids, MI; Fort Leavenworth, KS (abbreviated on a few); Fort Riley, KS. The envelopes all have condition problems and should be examined carefully, but signatures are complete and attractive. Sold as is. [10] Est. 1000-1500

Custer, George Armstrong. Ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” - a few “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. All with additional notations. Either the original destinations are crossed out and changed, or they are sent in care of others. Seven locations are represented - Monroe, Grand Rapids, Gross Isle and Detroit. MI; Fort Leavenworth and Topeka, KS; and New Brunswick, NJ. Names mentioned include K. C. Barker (Mayor of Detroit and a personal friend of the General), “Maj F. Lyon”, “Mrs Genl Gibbs”, and Charles Kendall. All of the envelopes have condition problems and should be carefully examined, but many of the signatures are complete and attractive. Sold as is. [10] Est. 1000-2000

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1176 1176

1175 1175

Custer, George Armstrong. A grouping of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. To locations in Monroe and Grand Rapids, MI; Louisville, KY; Washington, DC; and Poughkeepsie, NY. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Not quite as nice as the previous groupings, but still quite attractive. One end torn away. Some of the signatures are affected by postal cancels. Four are written in pencil. Sold as is. [10] Est. 1000-2000

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Custer, George Armstrong. A small group of five envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four locations are represented - Monroe, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; and “339 Penn Ave.”. One end of each envelope is torn off, and the postal cancels slightly affect the signatures. Sold as is. [5] Est. 1000-1500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1178 1178

Custer, George Armstrong. Another group of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” - one addressed to: “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Five different locations are represented - Monroe, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; Louisville, KY; and “339 Penn Ave.”. One end of each envelope is torn off, and the postal cancels slightly affect the signatures. Sold as is. [10] Est. 2000-3000

1179

Custer, George Armstrong. An additional group of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” some: “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Five locations are represented - Monroe, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; Cleveland; and “339 Penn Avenue”. One end of each envelope is torn off - save on one, and the postal cancels slightly affect the signatures. Sold as is. [10] Est. 2000-3000

1177 1177

Custer, George Armstrong.A group of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” - two “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four locations are represented: Monroe, MI; Fort Riley and Fort Leavenworth, KS; and “339 Penn Ave.”. One end of each envelope is torn off, but the signatures are all complete and attractive. Sold as is. [10] Est. 2000-3000

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1181 1181

1180 1180

Custer, George Armstrong. A further group of ten envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four locations are represented - Monroe, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; and 339 Penn Ave., DC. One end of each envelope is torn off - save on one, and the postal cancels slightly affect the signatures. Sold as is. [10] Est. 2000-3000

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Custer, George Armstrong. A group of nine larger envelopes (4 x 9”) addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer” a few: “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. Four locations are represented Monroe, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; and 339 Penn Ave, DC. Archivist’s notes in pencil suggest the letters carried inside two of these envelopes related to “1st Yellowstone.” One envelope bears a hand written advertisement in the upper left corner stating “Couriers tri weekly / from Ft. Hays to Ft. Harker.” That letter was originally to be delivered through the “Politeness of Mr. Hale”. One is dated “Feb 13th 1869”. The envelopes all have varying condition problems, and they should be examined carefully, but the signatures are complete and attractive. These were the only larger format signed envelopes in the shoe box. Sold as is. [9] Est. 1500-2500


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

Research Group of Custer Envelopes 1183

Research Group of Custer Envelopes. [Custer, George Armstrong.] Forty-Eight envelopes addressed to George Armstrong Custer. From a wide variety of sources. The archivist mentions General McClellan, R. B. Marcy, McClellan’s father-in-law, a Colonel Hall, and others. The letters contained were mailed to Custer in locations including Fort Lincoln, Dakota; West Point, NY; Washington, DC; Elizabethtown, KY; Fort Leavenworth and Ft. Hays, KS; Alexandra, LA; and many others. Also included are the tops of pages from Official West Point Registers for the years 1857, 1858, 1860, and one with no date. A clipped signature that may or may not be the General’s is also included. Varying conditions, all should be carefully examined. Sold as is. No returns. [53] Est. 1000-1500

ADDITIONAL AUTOGRAPHS

1182 1182

Custer, George Armstrong. Twenty-six envelopes addressed to “Mrs. Genl Custer”-one: “Mrs. Genl GA Custer”. All in General Custer’s distinctive hand. A variety of locations are represented - Monroe and Gross Isle, MI; Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley, KS; Ft. Lincoln, Dacota [sic]’ Elizabethtown, KY; New Brunswick, NJ; Canandaigua, NY; and “339 Penn Ave.”. The envelopes all have condition problems. Some are torn, some are water stained. Many of the signatures are complete, but several are not. They should be carefully examined. Sold as is. No returns. [26] Est. 3000-4500

1184

Berwick, Duke of [James Fitzjames] (1670-1734). English soldier, illegitimate son of James, Duke of York (later King James II); Marshal of France (1706); captured Madrid and defeated English at Almansa (1707); established Philip V on Spanish throne; killed at siege of Philippsburg in War of Polish Succession. Autograph Manuscript Letter Signed “Berwick”. In French, 2 pages, small 4to, Fitzramerle, August 11, 1732. To the Count de Moniemar, Berwick acknowledges his correspondent’s letter, informing him of his disembarkation and subsequent victory over the enemy. He wishes him success in his future campaigns. Fine and an uncommon autograph. Est. 150-250

1185

Booth, Evangeline Cory (1865-1950). Fourth General of the Salvation Army (1934-1939), born in South Hackney, London, the daughter of the founders of the Salvation Army; was sent to NY after her brother and his wife created a break-away group and tried to tempt away Army members, when she found the doors of the Army’s base on 14th St. locked against her she “mounted the fire escape and climbed through the rear window”, when the dissidents hissed and booed her, she wrapped the U.S. flag around herself and told them “Hiss that, if you dare.” Signed Photo. About 8x10 B&W depiction of Booth clad in Salvation Army attire, seated at a writing desk, a log or book before her, she signs below “To my sweet and loving friend. Now and always, Evangeline Booth Nov. 1934”. About Very Fine Est. 75-125

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1186

de Lesseps, Ferdinand. Best known as the developer of the Suez Canal, de Lesseps (1805-1894) began his career in the French diplomatic service. As head of the Franco-American Union, de Lesseps formerly presented the Statue of Liberty on June 11, 1884 to the United States. In his later years, he served as president of the Panama Canal Company, in the ill-fated first building attempt. Carte de Visite (ca. 1868-1869) of de Lesseps by Ch. Reutlinger, Paris. Inked “De Lesseps” on the back and a number penciled in. Overall About Very Fine. Accompanied by a cabinet card (with minor scuffs) of an uncertain gentleman, possibly connected to a railroad. [2] Est. 75-150

1187

Douglas. Frederick. Document signed. June 13, 1883. Deed of Trust for property in Washington, D. C. Signed by Douglas as Recorder of Deeds. Est. 300-500

1188

Ellsworth, Oliver (1745-1807). American revolutionary, lawyer and politician, a drafter of the Constitution, senator from Connecticut (1789-1796), 3rd Chief Justice of the United States (1796-1800), helped to establish the U.S. as a viable sovereign nation. Autograph Document Signed “O. Ellsworth. Handwritten order, Hartford,CT June 5th, 1778, to pay “Capt. Squire Hill Four Hundred Pounds” Also signed by “John Lawrence Esq Treasurer”. Quarterfold, very light soiling, Fine. Accompanied by an illustration of Ellsworth. [2] Est. 100-200

1189

Ellsworth, Oliver (1745-1807). American revolutionary, lawyer and politician, a drafter of the Constitution, senator from Connecticut (1789-1796), 3rd Chief Justice of the United States (1796-1800), helped to establish the U.S. as a viable sovereign nation. Autograph Document Signed “Oliv.Ellsworth”. One-page, about 4x8, Hartford, CT, April 30, 1804. Promissory note to his son-in-law Ezekiel Williams, Jr. or order at the Hartford Bank for $295, entirely in Ellworth’s hand. Two ink lines were used to cancel the signature. Endorsed by Williams on verso. Irregular edge, About Fine. Accompanied by B of E & P engraving of Ellsworth. [2] Est. 75-100

1190

Everett, Edward (1794-1865). American politician, educator and polymath, Governor of Massachusetts (1836-1840), 20th Secretary of State of the United States (1852-1853), Senator-Massachusetts (18531854); one of the great orators of the antebellum and Civil War eras, especially known for his oration at the dedication ceremony at the Gettysburg National Cemetery in 1863 before Lincoln’s two-minute address. Autograph Letter Signed “Edward Everett”. Two pages, Cambridge, Nov. 7, 1857. In it, Everett mentions receiving the correspondent’s letter and his original copy of the “Goodridge Café” which was also sent to Mr. Webster and mislaid. Multifold lines, About Very Fine. Accompanied by illustration of Everett. [2] Est. 150-200

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1191

Field, Cyrus West (1819-1892) American businessman and financier, who, along with other entrepreneurs, created the Atlantic Telegraph Company which laid the first telegraph cable across the Atlantic in 1858. Autograph Letter Signed “Cyrus W. Field”. One page, narrow lined stationery, 88 liberty St., New York, Nov. 20 (no year), addressed to Rembrandt Lockwood Esq., Architect, 293 Broadway. Field asks Lockwood to call or write to discuss a matter of business. Fine. Accompanied by illustration of Field. [2] Est. 100-150

1192 1192

George IV: Caroline of Brunswick. Daughter of the duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, married to George Prince of Wales in 1795. Moved to Italy in 1814 after the couple’s separation. Returned to Great Britain upon George’s ascendency to the throne in 1820 as Queen Consort, even as George sought to divorce her. Barred by George IV from the coronation in July 1821, Caroline fell ill and died three weeks later. Autograph Letter Signed “C Q”. One-page on folded over foolscap, Turin, the first of May, 1820. Caroline talks of a rheumatic ailment which has kept her in bed for five days and of her travel plans. “Caroline” penciled in later below, minor dog-ear bottom, Very Good-Fine. Accompanied by b&w of painting of Caroline. [2] Est. 400-600

1193

Getty, Jean Paul.Famed Anglo-American industrialist, founder of Getty Oil Company, named “richest living American” by Fortune magazine in 1957, at his death in 1976, he was worth over $2 Billion, nonetheless he was known for being a miser. Lot of Autograph Documents Signed “J.Paul Getty”. (10) Personal Checks, January 8, 1942, to various companies. Canceled and endorsed on verso. Fine-Very Fine [10] Est. 125-175


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1194

Gladstone, William. English liberal politician, Prime Minister of Great Britain four times (1868-1874; 1880-1885; Feb.-July 1886; 1892-1894), Chancellor of the Exchequer four times; proponent of Irish Home Rule. Autograph Letter Signed “W Gladstone.” Two pages on narrow, oblong sheet, Hawarden, Sept. 20, 1865 concerning a writer that Gladstone appears to have been asked about. Twice folded, Fine. Est. 90-120

1195

Hay, John Milton (1838-1905). American statesman, diplomat, author and journalist, private secretary and assistant to President Abraham Lincoln; 37th Secretary of State of the United States (1898-1905). Autograph Letter Signed “John Hay”. One-page, typewritten on Department of State stationery, January 10, 1902. Letter of introduction for the “Honorable Eugene A. Philbin, of New York City , who is about to proceed abroad.” Three-fold, Fine. Est. 50-75

1196

Hoover, J. Edgar. [Samuel Goldwyn] TLS on Bureau letterhead to Samuel Goldwyn. June 25, 1942. Hoover tells the head of Paramount Studios that he has no objection to references to the Bureau appearing in a story called “The Washington Angle.” Two Ledger holes at the top Est. 150-250

Lincoln Signs as President

1197 1197

Lincoln, Abraham - Sixteenth President of the United States (1809-65, served from 1861); guided the nation through the Civil War until his assassination by actor John Wilkes Booth; initially a moderate on the issue of slavery, the war compelled him to fight successfully for emancipation. Partly engraved Document Signed “Abraham Lincoln” as President, 1 page, large folio, on vellum, Washington, July 1, 1864. He names Joseph D Carney a captain in the 7th US Infantry Regiment. Countersigned by Secretary of War “Edwin M Stanton.” Folds, usual toning and soiling, crack to paper War Department seal, overall in VG condition. “At the time of this order, Lincoln’s presidency appeared to be at a low ebb. The watershed victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg were a year old, yet the end of the war was nowhere in sight, leading many to believe re-election was impossible. Within months, the capture of Atlanta would make it clear that the triumph of the Union was only a matter of time, securing Lincoln’s second term. We do not find Carney among lists of West Point graduates; no doubt he was one of many non-commissioned officers who were advanced to feed the army’s hunger for experienced leaders.” Est. 4000-5000

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1198

Lincoln, Robert Todd (1843-1926). First son of President Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln, lawyer, 35th Secretary of War of the United States (1881-1885). General counsel of the Pullman Palace Car Co, and later its president. Cabinet Photo. Very minor flaking in border and a few small edge nicks, Fine. Est. 125-175

1199

McKinley, William. 25th President of the United States (1897-1901), last president to have served in the Civil War, earlier Governor of Ohio (1892-1896). His clipped Signature, accompanied by his wife’s clipped Signature, “Ida S. McKinley”. About Very Fine [2] Est. 150-300

1200

Roosevelt. Franklin. Typewritten letter dated March 21, 1918, on Navy Department letterhead to John B. Herreshoff thanking him for supplying binoculars and telescopes to the Navy. Signed by F. D. Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. John was the brother of Nathaniel Herreshoff, the President of the famous Bristol, Rhode Island yacht manufacturing company. A second typewritten page advises that a certificate of thanks will be forthcoming. Est. 250-350

1201

1202

Simpson, Wallace & the Duke of Windsor, formerly Edward VIII. On the tenth of December, 1936, Edward VIII abdicated the British throne to marry the American socialite Wallis Simpson, who was once divorced and at the time separated from her second husband. Addressing the public in a radio broadcast the next day, Edward said: “I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility, and to discharge my duties as King as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.” Simpson’s divorce was finalized in May, and the couple was married at the Château de Candé in France, June 3, 1937. A pair of B&W Photos of the couple, 7x9 and 4 ¾ x 6 1/5. The first, shows the couple outside by a palm-lined balustrade with a large group; the second depicts Wallis and Edward on a bench beneath a palm conversing with two men. It is possibly the photos were taken in Portugal, where the couple stayed after fleeing their Paris apartment following the German advance into France. Both prints are clean and problem free, Very Fine. Est. 90-120 Trumble, Jonathan (1710-1785). Deputy Governor of Connecticut (1766-1769), Governor of Connecticut (1769-1784), friend and advisor of George Washington throughout the revolutionary period. Autograph Document Signed “Jon.Trumble”. (This was the original spelling of his name which he later changed to `Trumbull’.) Legal notice to the Sheriff of the County of Windham, town of Lebanon, 15th of April 1762 concerning the Recovered Judgment against Jehiel Williams for the sum of 17 Pounds “Lawfull Money.” Well-preserved, Fine-About Very Fine. Est. 75-100

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1203

Webster, Daniel. American statesman, famed orator, influential Whig leader; 14th and 19th Secretary of State of the United States (1841-1843, 1850-1852), Massachusetts Senator (1827-1841, 1845-1850). Autograph Note Signed. “D Webster”. One page, oblong, narrow leaf, May 25, 1841 addressed to John Adams Smith Esq. Foxing and tear on edge (which doesn’t interfere with the message), Good-About Very Good. Also Autograph Document Signed “D Webster”. Receipt to Post Office, Washington, DC, Jan. 7, 1852 on Department of State stationery. Fine. Accompanied by illustration of Webster. [3] Est. 125-175

Autographs by Category 1204

American Revolution-Prelude: Lee, John (17331793). English lawyer and politician, king’s counsel, Solicitor General for England and Wales. Autograph Letter Signed “John Lee”. Two-pages, Lincoln’s, 31 January 1772, 4to. To Rev. Mr. Skinner. With postmarked, integral address leaf franked by T. Lockhart. Excellent content letter speaking of religion, Lord North, Lord Rockingham, William Pitt, religious debates in Parliament, Dr. Priesley on divinity, Dr. Chandler and Colonel Burgoyne. Tear into right fold, otherwise About Fine; also a Handwritten Check, Philadelphia, July 27, 1773, written by one Leonard Jacoby to Capt. Daniel Ferguson in the sum of 27 Pounds 4 Shillings and 6 Pence for 121 Gallons of Brandy. Jacoby appears to have had a shop on Second Street above Race St. Very Good. [2] Est. 125-175

1205

American Revolution: Gates, Horatio. Retired British soldier who served as an American general during the Revolution, took credit for the victory at the Battle of Saratoga; one of Revolution’s most controversial figures because of his role in the Conway Cabal, the attempt to discredit George Washington, his claims for Saratoga and his actions and defeat at Camden. Autograph Document Signed Mr “Gates”. Receipt for hay, New York, Bowery, Feb. 19, 1793 in his hand. Hay and price totals on verso. Small nick on one corner, otherwise Good Fine. Accompanied by illustration of Gates. [2] Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1206

Anti-Slavery, Literature: Lowell, James Russell (1819-1891). American Romantic poet, critic, editor and diplomat, associated with the Fireside Poets, Harvard professor; wrote extensively against slavery in the 1840’s. Autograph Document Signed “J.R. Lowell”. Bank check drawn on the Charles River National Bank, Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 28, 1876 for $57.15 payable to Thomas Sherwin Esq., Collector; all in Lowell’s hand. Two spindle punches. Fine. And Phillips, Wendell (1811-1884). American abolitionist, advocate for Native Americans, orator and lawyer. Autograph Letter Signed “Wendell Phillips”. Four pages on one sheet of about 8x10, July 5, 1879, no place. Phillips apologizes to a friend for not being able to come as his wife is very ill, he later mentions “our old anti-slavery friend Rev. Samuel May now at Leicester, Mass.” Accompanied by illustrations of Lowell and Phillips. [4] Est. 100-150

1207

[Art]: de Kooning, Elaine; John F. Kennedy De Kooning (1918 or 1920-1989) — American Figurative Expressionist, Abstract Expressionist and art editor; her portrait of President John F. Kennedy hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Est. 125-225

1208 1208

1209 1209

Artists [2]. Nash, Paul (1889-1946). War artist during both World Wars, pioneer of modernism in Great Britain; co-founder of the influential modern art movement Unit One (1933). Autograph Letter Signed “Paul Nash”. One-page, narrow, on pale blue folded sheet, Iver Heath, Bucks, Dec. 26, 1919. Nash advises “Mr del Re” that he will be “very pleased to visit the Chelsea Book Club” when he returns to town. Slight soiling on fold, otherwise Fine. Leighton, Frederick (1830-1896). Painter and sculptor, president of the Royal Academy (1878-1896), produced a compelling body of classically-inspired work. Autograph Note Signed “F.Leighton”. Onepage on narrow stationery with red imprint: 2 Holland Park Road, Kensington, W., no date. He tells “Benson” that he is “anxiously expecting” his “copper capsa. Could you let me have it?” Faint smudge, Fine. [2] Est. 250-500

Artists: Cruikshank, George. English caricaturist and Illustrator of numerous popular literary works, most notably Dickens’ Sketches by Boz and Oliver Twist; water-colorist and painter. Choice Autograph Document Signed “Cruikshank”. One-page, oblong narrow 8vo, London, April 12, 1844. Bank Check No. “371” drawn on “Finsbury Bank,” instructs “Mr. W.C. Fish” to pay “Bradish” or bearer “P.10,” accomplished entirely in his hand. Single, circular punchhole cancellation and spindle hole, both far from signature, otherwise Very Good. Accompanied by an uncommon album page of simple Sketches Signed “Geo. Cruikshank,” 2 pages, oblong 8vo, no place, undated. An off-hand page of penciled character sketches, perhaps ideas for a costume party scene, signed in ink at bottom.[2] Est. 400-600

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1211

Collection: American Artists. 19th-20th Century Frederick M. Coffin. Autograph Letter Signed “Fred M. Coffin”. One page, small 4to, NY, Oct. 19, 1853. The illustrator writes to editor and artist Benson J. Lossing. Good content regarding design of “Committee before the President. I can not find anything either a portrait of Jackson or anything like a picture of the room in the White house which makes it rather embarrassing for me to go on with the sketch…” Ink somewhat light; William Hart. Autograph Quotation Signed “William Hart”. ¾ page, 8vo, `Studio Building’, no exact place, 1866. The Scottish-born, Hudson River School landscapist makes note of the “`Art’ of this Country”; Willard Leroy Metcalf. Interesting Autograph Letter Signed “Willard L. Metcalf”. ¾ page, 8vo, Plainfield, NH, Sept. 27, 1911. Metcalf responds to a question about publishing rights for his painting “Ice-bound”; Peter Newell. Autograph Letter Signed “Peter Newell”. One page, 8vo, Leonia, NJ, May 19, 1917. The book illustrator advises a Mrs. Woodruff: “I would be very glad indeed to sketch in your booth…during the term of the Actor’s Fund Fair…”; Thornton Oakley. Choice Autograph Letter Signed “Thornton Oakley”. One page, 4to, on his imprinted stationery, Jan. 1, 1950. The painter praises fellow illustrator Frank Schoonover’s “superb Christmas Card you sent us!...” Also envelope in Oakley’s hand to Schoonover; Antonio P. Martino. Good content Autograph Letter Signed “Antonio P. Martino”. ¾ page, 4to, Thousand Oaks, CA, Dec. 31, 1979. Responding to a question, the artist comments on what gives a work of art lasting importance; Edward Grove. Good content Autograph Letter Signed “Edward R. Grove”. One page, 4to, Sea-Lake Studio, July 25, 1982. Grove answers the same question posed to Martino. Generally age-toned, some with minor fold wear, Very Good to Fine. [7] Est. 400-700

1212

Collection: World of Creative Arts Accumulation A diverse group of autographs that span many subject groups, but an opportunity to acquire a starter collection of autographs or to enhance a current one. Includes signed, loose stamps, Typed Letters Signed and signatures over thematic stamps on 3” x 5” cards. Categories include Architects, Chefs, Clown Hall of Famers, Hollywood, Illustrators, Music, Orchestra Leaders, TV, Performers, Photography, Sculptors, and many more. A small sampling of these great pieces: Victor Borge, Henry Winkler, Julie Child, Dagmar, John Calvert (“The Falcon”), Lloyd Bridges, Jimmie Fidler, William Wegman, Lew Wasserman, Paul Prudhomme, and more. A truly spectacular group of autographs. Generally Fine. A lot of this size and type is likely to contain some autopen or secretarial examples that have not been identified; as such, it is sold asis and potential bidders are advised to view it before the auction.[Please contact our offices for a more complete list of names.] [100+] Est. 500-1000

1210 1210

Artists: Reynolds, Sir Joshua. Influential English portrait painter, and first president of the Royal Academy. A dominant force in English art, the hard-working, gregarious and keenly intellectual Reynolds (1723-1792) was friends with Dr. Samuel Johnson, David Garrick, Swiss-Austrian painter Angelica Kauffman and Edmund Burke among others. Choice Autograph Document Signed “Joshua Reynolds,” One page, narrow, oblong 4to, London, November —, 1783. A receipt from a Mr. Wanchope for “one-hundred sixty three pounds five shillings being the amount of an account due to me by the late Earl of Errol as particularly stated in my letter to Mr. Wanchope of the eighteenth of Octr. last and which with [sic] all demands that I had against the said Earl are hereby discharged…” Binder hole at top affecting date, wear to irregular right edge, otherwise in Very Good condition. In his “The Journal of a Tour of the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson,” the great biographer James Boswell refers to a full-length portrait done by Reynolds in the Earl’s home in 1773. It is quite likely that the present bill was for money still owned on that work at Errol’s death in 1778. Est. 1000-1600

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1213

Authors/Film: Cromwell, James Henry Roberts (1896-1990) and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Cromwell — American diplomat, author and one-time husband of Doris Duke “the richest girl in the world”. His book, “Pax Americana”. Chicago, A. Kroch And Son, 1941. Blue cloth weave covers. Signed on title page “to Douglas Fairbanks Jr. a Fine American Patriot From James H. R. Cromwell”. Ex-Libris: Douglas Fairbanks with “From: J.H.R. Cromwell” label below on inside front endpaper. No dust jacket, spot of soiling bottom cover, Very Good. Est. 100-150

1215 1215

Authors: de Saint-Exupéry, Antoine. French aristocrat, writer, poet, pioneering aviator and national icon best known for his novella “The Little Prince” and his lyrical aviation writing. His philosophical memoir, “Terre des hommes” was used to create the central theme of one of the 20th century’s most successful world’s fairs “Terre des homes - Man and His World, Montreal’s Expo ‘67. While flying from Corsica on a reconnaissance mission for the Allies in 1944, Saint-Exupéry’s plane vanished leaving a mystery that has not yet been conclusively solved. His renowned memoir, “Wind, Sand and Stars”. NY, Reynal & Hitchcock, 1939. Dedicated and Signed on the title page, “Antoine de Saint Exupéry”. While attempting to break the speed record in the Paris-to-Saigon air race, Saint-Exupéry’s plane crashed Dec. 30, 1935 in the Sahara. After 4 days, Saint-Exupéry and his mechanic-navigator André Prévot were found by a Bedouin and rescued. This near-death experience figures prominently in this work. Very Good. Est. 1000-1500

1216

Authors [2].Vidal, Gore. One of America’s most versatile writers, essayist, novelist, playwright, political commentator. His book, “Empire”. Signed First Edition. Private printing of The First Edition Society, Franklin Library, Franklin Center, PA, 1987, illustrated. Signed “Gore Vidal” on front endpaper. Giltstamped brown leather. Penciled inside front marbled endpaper, Fine. Masters, Edgar Lee. American poet, biographer and dramatist. His book, “Lee, A Dramatic Poem”. Signed “Edgar Lee Masters”, inside front endpaper, number 83 of 250. NY, Macmillian, 1926. Gilt-stamped, black cloth weave. Fine. [2] Est. 100-200

1214 1214

Authors: Curie, Ève. French and American writer, journalist and pianist, daughter of the pioneering physicists Marie and Pierre Curie; known as the “First Lady of UNICEF” for her devoted work with that organization (her husband, Henry Richardson Labouisse, Jr., winner of the 1965 Nobel Prize, was its Executive Director). First edition in French of her acclaimed biography of her mother, “Madame Curie”. Paris, Gallimard, 1938. Paperback, 304pp, 8vo. Signed “Pour Monsieur Charles Loridans avec ma gratitude pour accueil charmant et toutes les penses de sympathie d’ Eve Curie”. After the death of her mother in 1934, Ève withdrew from social life to pay a loving homage to Marie. She rented a small flat in Auteiul, Yvelines where she gathered her mother’s letters and documents. In the autumn of 1935, she visited her family in Poland for insights into her mother’s early years. She composed the biography in 1937 focusing on Marie’s life while also portraying her own growing-up years with her sister Irène in the Curie household. Cover separated, back cover folded, front endpaper fraying, About Good. Est. 500-750

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1220

Aviation: Richard E. Byrd. American naval officer, explorer and aviator; flew over the North Pole and back with Floyd Bennett, awarded the Medal of Honor for his accomplishment, led a number of Antarctic expeditions; made 42-hour transatlantic flight from New York to France. Choice Typewritten Letter Signed “Dick Byrd.” Half-page, 4to, on address-imprinted stationery, Boston, Massachusetts, May 10, 1933. Writing to “Hon. Hiram Bingham,” US Senator, explorer and aviator, a much-concerned Byrd writes: “I have just learned that one reason Amelia Earhart resigned from the [National Aeronautical] Association was because she objected to starting a magazine that would compete with the commercial aeronautical magazine. Please let me know about this…I have some very close friends among the magazine people and I naturally would not want to do anything to add to their difficulties... I am sure you will understand this query so please don’t take any steps in regard to announcing my acceptance of the Vice Presidency until you hear from me regarding this point. I don’t think it is going to help you with the Navy to have me take this position since my stand on economy has been misunderstood in certain sections… Below Byrd’s large signature, he hastily pens” “My only thought in connection with this is to help you.” Bingham’s date receipt stamp, and notations written in right margin, with file holes at head, otherwise Very Good. Est. 100-150

1221

Aviation: Lady Mary Heath (1896-1939). Irish aviatrix, first woman to hold commercial flying license in Great Britain; first pilot to fly a small open cockpit plane from Cape Town to London; first woman appointed as co-pilot with civil aviation. Autograph “L Mary Heath” on unlined index card. Tape marks on back, otherwise About Very Fine. Accompanied by image of Lady Heath. [2] Est. 50-75

1222

Collection: Aviation Leaders / NASA A nice collection of astronauts and astronaut candidates, and aviation executives, some signed on 3” x 5” cards over US postage stamps commemorating aviation, space exploration, but also (as marked) with TLSs and SPs. Those designated with an asterisk (*) are tipped to album pages. Group includes Norman Augustine, Joe Leonard, Robert Crandall, Dan McKinnon, Gordon Bethune, David Neeleman, Brooke Knapp, Hugo Eckner, Richard Branson, George Mikelsons, Paul Mac Cready, George Luck, Lodewijk Van Der Berg, Reid Weisman, Mark Vande Hei, Scott Tingle, Kate Rubins, Kjell Lindgren, Herb Kelleher and Colleen Barrett (2) (with TLS and ANS), James Bell, W. James McNerney, Edward J. Daly* (with TLS), Jim Parker* (with ANS), John Young*, Donald Burr*, Frank Lorenzo*(with TLS), Greg C. Johnson (SP), and Jack Fischer (TLS and SP). Lot also includes (13) unsigned NASA official photographs of Space Shuttle Mission Crews from STS-26 through STS-41 (no STS-37, 39 or -40). All in Fine-Very Fine condition. [43] Est. 150-300

1217 1217

Authors: Gide, André French writer and essayist, an inspiration for Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre; known both for his fictional and autobiographical work, his career ranged from the symbolist movement to the advent of anti-colonialism; winner of the 1947 Nobel Prize for Literature. His essays on, “Montaigne”. London, Blackamore Press, 1929. Green cloth weave covers. Signed on front endpaper “André Gide” Number “748” of 800 (300 British, 500 U.S.). Spine bump, some foxing, Good-About Very Good. Est. 250-350

1218

Authors: Gide, André. French writer and essayist, an inspiration for Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre; known both for his fictional and autobiographical work, his career ranged from the symbolist movement to the advent of anti-colonialism; winner of the 1947 Nobel Prize for Literature. His essays on, “Montaigne”. London, Blackamore Press, 1929. Green cloth weave covers. Signed on front endpaper “André Gide” Number “547” of 800 (300 British, 500 U.S.). Spine splitting with some fraying top and bottom, some light page creasing, Good. Est. 250-350

1219

Aviation: National Aeronautic Association of U.S.A Aviator’s Certificate. No.7098. Issued May 31, 1929 to Adrian E. Cameron. Signed by Orville Wright as the Chairman of the Contest Committee of the National Aeronautic Association, oldest national aviation organization in the United States. Mounted in a blue leatherette pocket book with gold lettering on the cover. Excellent Orville Wright signature. Est. 1000-1500

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1223

British Politics: Knatchbull-Hugessen, Edward, 1st Baron Brabourne (1829-1893) British Liberal politician, Under-Secretary of State for the Home Dept. (1866, 1868-1871) and for the Colonies (1871-1874). Autograph Letter Signed “E H Knatchbull Hugessen”. Narrow, 4 ¼ x 7, Whitehall, April 9, 1842(?). Tape residue, Very Good. With a June 1870 Vanity Fair Caricature of KnatchbullHugessen by Ape (Carlo Pellegrini). “A promising apprentice”. Tear lower right corner, and crease, About Fine. [2] Est. 60-90

1224

Cigars & Tobacco: Gold Hunter Cigar Box Labels. [2] Multicolored independent gold hunter on his way to the Klondike. Both EF. Est. 50-75

1225

Cigars & Tobacco: Will’s Cigarettes Tobacco Card Series. [177] Arms of Universities Series (18 pcs). R. A. F. Badges Series (50 pcs). Kings & Queens of England (50 pcs). Old Inns (42 pcs). Ships Figureheads (24). Also included are three sheets of 50 US 4 cent flag stamps. Est. 100-150

1226

Circus: The “Barnum and Bailey Official Program and Book of Wonders Combined,” 48 pages, 4to, for the season of 1903. Colorful cover lithograph by Courier depicts circus performers. Some paper loss top back cover from old adhesion, spine framy, otherwise Very Good. Est. 75-150

1227

Civil War: John Adams Dix. Secretary of the Treasury, Major General, NY Senator and Governor, President of the Mississippi & Missouri Railroad. As Treasury Secretary, at the outbreak of the Civil War, Dix sent a telegram to Treasury agents in New Orleans ordering that “if anyone attempts to haul down the American flag, shoot him on the spot.” This quote (with “haul” changed to “tear”) found its way onto some of the best known Civil War Patriotic tokens, known popularly as “Dix Cents”. Autograph Letter Signed “John A. Dix”. Two pages on a 5x8 sheet of Headquarters, Department of the East stationery, “New York City” lined through and replaced by inked “Boston”, 22 Oct. 1863, Unofficial. Writing to Maj. Gen. Halleck, Dix says: “ I have been as far as Portland on a tour of inspection, and find everything satisfactory, except at Newport, which is utterly defenceless, having nothing but old guns…I write for now to request that Maj. Halpine may not be taken from me. His presence in NY just now is very important. He is an intolerable thorn in the side of the Copperheads, and I am told they are conspiring to get him removed. It is all important, for the good of the country, that he should remain…” Major Halpine is likely Charles Halpine, future brevet brigadier general. The back has been taped for support at the middle fold, some small nicks top and bottom, Good-About Very Good. Accompanied by an engraving of Dix in uniform. [2] Est. 150-300

1228

Civil War Letters to Battlefield Surgeon [22] An uncommon gathering of correspondence and miscellaneous documents relating to, and written by, Langdon H. Marvin, a surgeon who had served in several military hospitals during the war, and his son, John H. Marvin who served in the 18th New York. Featured among this group is a July 14, 1861 letter from the young Marvin exclaiming: “Our company was ordered out yesterday on a scouting expedition...We expected to capture a Secessionist Captain but he did not return to his home...Our first Sargent deserted...” After gaining experience in his outfit, Marvin, in his letter of February 8, 1863, relates: “Our regt. was absent from here on the haste advance one week & I can tell you we had a severe time of it but were glad to get back alive...” Just over a year later, on October 16, 1864, Marvin remarks: “The boys are talking about the election but it is all on one side with us. If we have a chance to vote I think that Abe will win. We think there is a chance of closing the war soon if we can keep him at the helm.” Defects include age-toning and fold wear with short breaks, otherwise, as a whole, in good condition, Several letters accompanied by their original transmittal envelopes. A desirable group. Est. 200-400

1229

Civil War: Sheet Music Written in Remembrance of the First Civil War Deaths. “THE SLAIN AT BALTIMORE.” A. W. Auner, publisher, Philadelphia. One page, slightly age toned. Est. 50-75

1230

Post Civil War: Brown, Joseph Emerson. Governor of Georgia (1857-1865), denounced CSA President Jefferson Davis as a tyrant, supported Andrew Johnson’s Reconstruction, Senator-Georgia (1880-1891). Autograph Document Signed “Joseph E. Brown”. (10) Bank Checks drawn on W.M. & R.J. Lowry, Bankers, Atlanta, GA, 1885-1887 issued to various individuals. A few with corner problems, Very Good to Fine [10] Est. 100-150

1231 1231

Colonial Paper. Massachusetts Government Lottery. 1744. No.694. Signed by Samuel Watts, one of the five lottery directors. Indent, left. Uncirculated, with some age toning. The lottery act was passed in January of 1745, and the tickets were printed and sold over the next several months. The drawing took place right in Faneuil Hall. Watts (1716-1788) went on to serve as a Selectman for Chelsea for various years between 1750 and 1773. Est. 600-800

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1232

Film: Seberg, Jean Dorothy. American actress, known for such films as Bonjour Tristesse, Breathless, Paint Your Wagon, The Mouse that Roared and Airport. After marrying a French lawyer in 1958 (who she divorced in 1960), Seberg was Paris-based for the rest of her life. Seberg was one of the most famous targets of the FBI’s Counter Intelligence program. Because of her support of certain civil rights groups in the ‘60s and several small monetary gifts to the Black Panthers, the FBI created false stories and publically defamed her - Seberg’s second husband named the FBI’s campaign as the reason behind her death by barbiturate overdose (ruled a suicide) in 1979 Her copy of Victor Hugo’s “Les Miserables”. Garden City, NY, Literary Guild of America, 1954. Signed in blue ink on the front endpaper “Jean D. Seberg”. Fine. Est. 250-350

1234

Film and Literature grouping. Andrews, Dame Julie. British film and stage superstar. Her memoir of her early years “Home”. NY, Hyperion, 2008. Signed boldly on front endpaper “Julie Andrews”. As New; Wilder, Thornton (1897-1975). American playwright and novelist, winner of three Pulitzers. His book “The Woman of Andros”. London, etc., Longmans Green And Co., 1930. Signed on inside front endpaper “Thornton Wilder”, number 123 of 260 copies; Wallace, Irving. American best-selling author. The Wallaces/Wallechinsky’s book “The Intimate Sex Lives of Famous People”. NY, Delacorte Press, 1981. Signed on front endpaper “May 20, 1981 Dear Milton -You’re in good company. Many thanks -Irving Wallace David Wallechinsky Sylvia Wallace”. The dedication is possibly to comedian Milton Berle. The last two both Fine-About Very Fine; [3] Est. 100-200

1235

Film and Music grouping: Claude Rains. Englishborn actor, known for roles in the “The Wolf Man, The Invisible Man, The Adventures of Robin Hood, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Lawrence of Arabia” and “Casablanca”. Autograph Document Signed “Cl”. One page on his stationery, Sandwich, NH, 9/13/66. He apologizes to Melissa for not thanking her for the present from Russia. With envelope addressed in his hand; Edgar Bergen. American actor and radio performer, best known as a ventriloquist, father of Candice Bergen. Autograph Document Signed “Edgar Bergen”. Two-page, type-written agreement on J. Walter Thompson Co. stationery, NY, Nov. 13, 1944, for Bergen’s performance on the Elgin National Watch Company’s program on Nov. 23, 1944 from 4:00 to 6:00 pm; Vincent Price. “BlackEyed Susan” Program, Boston, Nov. 22, 1954 Signed by the famed actor along with the comedy’s other perfomers: Kay Medford, Everett Sloan, Dana Wynter, and Charles Boaz; Signed B&W Photo of the late Michael Clarke Douglas, best known for his role in “The Green Mile”; “Good Earth” photo postcard autographed by Chingwah Lee; and Signed B&W Photos (about 8x10) of the Queen of Jazz Ella Fitzegerald and the Texas Troubador Ernest Tubb. Fine-Very Fine [8]. Est. 100-150

1236

French Authors: Aragon, Louis (1897-1982). Poet, novelist and editor; long-time member of the Communist Party, member of the Académie Goncourt, founding member of Surrealism. His book, “Les Communistes (Février-Septembre 1939)”. La Bibliothèque Française, 1949. Paperback. Signed on title page simply “Aragon”. Good Est. 100-150

1233 1233

Film & Entertainment: Garland, Judy (born Frances Ethel Gumm). Beloved American actress, singer and vaudevillian, named the “greatest entertainer who ever lived” by Fred Astaire; perhaps most identified with the 1939 epic film “Wizard of Oz”, her song from it, “Over the Rainbow” is the number one movie song of all time; named 8th among the “Greatest Female Stars” of all time by the American Film Institute. B&W Photo Signed “Judy Garland”. The 8x10 pic shows a smiling Judy in make-up wearing a terry robe with a relative or friend, the signature slightly weak in spots (from the pen used). About Very Fine and Rare. Est. 250-400

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1237

French Authors: Aveline, Claude (1901-1992) — Pen name of Evgen Avtsine. Versatile writer, publisher, editor, poet and member of the French Resistance; winner of the 1952 Grand Prix of the Société des gens de lettres, and the 1955 Prix Italia. His book, “Les Muses Mêlées”. Paris, André Delpeuch, 1926, illustrated. Card-cover with wrapper. Signed on front endpaper “pour Monsieur Clement Janin en Souvenir d’Anatole France et de Steinlen [Swiss-born, French Art Nouveau painter], et en temoignage de fidèle sympathie” Minor, neat pencil notation above Aveline’s dedication, very minor foxing, Very Good. Est. 100-150

1238

French Authors: Bordier, Roger. Writer, journalist and art critic; winner of the 1961 Prix Renaudot. His book, “Les Blés”. Paris, Calmann-Lévy, 1961. Paperback. Dedicated with a long inscription and Signed on title page, “Roger Bordier”. Very Good. Est. 100-150

1239

French Authors .[3] Cendrars, Blaise [FrédéricLouis Sauser]. Swiss-born, French novelist and poet who had considerable influence on the European modernist movement, Commander - Légion d’honneur (for service in World War I in which he lost an arm). His book, “Bourlinguer”. Paris, Les Éditions Denoël, 1948. Signed on title page “à Monsieur Vivien tres cordial homage de Blaise Cendrars Saint Segond 22/iv/49”. Good-About Very Good. Millet, Marcel. Writer, poet. His book, “La touchante aventure de Segondine”. Paris, Flammarion, 1925. Paperback. Signed on title page: “A René Violaines au poete vrai, à l’homme, à l’ami, de tout mon coeur. Marcel Millet”. Good. Lebois, Paul. Writer. His book, “Les Trois Amoureuses De Villeclaire”. Blaineville-Sur-Mer, L’Amitié Par Le Livre, 1968, illustrated. Softbound. Signed “Pour M. et Mme Violaines ce livre du “soir de la penseé” avec mon sympathique souvenir Lebois Rennes, 39 rue Guymenet, le 17 dec 1968”. Very Good. [3] Est. 125-225

1240 1240

French Authors: France, Anatole. Poet, journalist, novelist and bibliophile; known for Thaïs, Penguin Island, The Gods are Athirst and many other works; member of the Académie Française, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, 1921; considered in his day, the ideal French man of letters; signatory of Emile Zola’s manifesto in support of Alfred Dreyfus in the infamous Dreyfus Affair. His childhood memoire, “Le Petit Pierre”. Paris, Calmann-Lévy, 1918. Paperback with quarter leather and blue cloth weave slip jacket. Signed on front endpaper “A mon illustre confrére George Middleton homage Anatole France”. It is likely that his dedication is to the American playwright George Middleton (1880-1967). “David Middleton” stamped on inside cover and front endpaper, Good. Est. 300-500

1241 1241

French Authors: Giono, Jean (1895-1970). Humanistic writer whose fictional works were largely set in Provence (Giono spent most of his life in Manosque, his birthplace, in the Alps-de-HauteProvence); inspired first by the Classics then later by Stendahl; an ardent pacifist after his experiences serving on the frontlines in World War I, winner of the Prince Rainier of Monaco Literary Prize (1953), member of the Académie Goncourt (1954) and Conseil Littéraire de Monaco (1963). His book, “Le Bonheur Fou”. Gallimard, 1957. Red cloth cover. Signed on title page, “à Monsieur Jean Kraeber amicalement Jean Giono”. Set against Italy’s 1848 Revolution, the book is part of Giono’s Hussard series (inspired by Balzac’s 10-part Comédie humaine, Giono never realized the full project and just produced 4 Hussard novels). Penciled line on front endpaper, otherwise Fine. Est. 300-500

Page 163


The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Signed Antimemoires by Malraux

1244

French writers: Gérard, Rosemonde (1871-1953). French poet and playwright, wife of Edmond Rostand (author of Cyrano de Bergerac), best known for her couplet “For, you see, each day I love you more. Today more than yesterday and less than tomorrow.” Autograph Letter Signed “Rosemonde Rostand”. One-page, on stationery sheet, no place, no date. In purple ink, Rosemonde profusely thanks her dear friend for a gift. Quarter-fold, Fine-About Very Fine . Together with a paper ticket, Université des Annales [conference], May 9, 1927 for Madame Edmond Rostand. [2] Est. 50-100

1245

French Writers. A Collection of 9 Letters of: Edmond Lepelletier (1846-1913); Gaston Paris (1839-1903); Eugene Manuel (1823-1901) - a missive written to his teacher; Jules Lemaître (18531914) - brief ALS on card of this noted French critic and dramatist; Xavier Marmier (1808-1892); Paul Thureau-Dangin (1837-1913); Albert Jean (18921975); Gerard Bauer (1888-1967); Adelaïde -Émilie Filleul, Marquise de Souza-Botelho (1761-1836) - lover of Tallyrand and American statesman Gouverneur Morris; also a letter of Andre Tardieu (1876-1945), French politician and three time Prime Minister. Generally Very Good to Fine. An interesting archive. [10] Est. 200-400

1246

Fur Trade: [American Fur Company: Vanderburgh’s Death] Interesting autograph letter signed by John Catron to Robert Campbell in St. Louis. He explains that “Wm. H. Vanderburg the clerk of the American Fur Co. drew a Bill of Exchange on P[ierre] Chouteau Agt for said Company in favour of George Ennis for the sum of $473.50...for furs my Brother [Minatree Catron] sold to the Am. Fur Copy...with the instructions to pay me the money. Mr. Chouteau has refused payment and the Bill is returned protested...Ennis informs me that you had a draft or Bill...drawn by same Vanderburgh as clerk of Am Fur Co on same Chouteau for a large amount” and wants to know if Chouteau protested that, too. Vanderburgh had become one of the AMF’s top men in the Western Department, running its trapping operations with Andrew Drips. They had recently been chasing Tom Fitzpatrick and his men through Blackfoot country. The day after this letter was written, Vanderburgh and a handful of trappers were ambushed by about a hundred Blackfeet. He and one other man were killed. Vanderburgh’s body was never found. Est. 200-300

1247

Hollywood Actresses, a quintet of Signed Photos, 8x10 or slightly larger: Lana Turner, color; Janet Leigh, reprint photo of “Psycho” shower scene; Jane Powell, B&W; Mary Carlisle, B&W on reprint paper; and German-born Luise Rainer, B&W on reprint paper - the last two, both centenarian actresses!. All Choice Very Fine [5] Est. 90-120

1242 1242

1243

French Authors: Malraux, André. Novelist, art theorist, France’s Minister for Cultural Affairs, winner of the Prix Goncourt (1933 - for “La Condition Humaine”), served in the Republican forces in the Spanish Civil War, and in the French Army then the Resistance in World War II. A presentation copy to his editor of his book, “Antimémoires”. Gallimard, 1967. Paperback, large format, with red “MALRAUX” banner. Signed on title page, “Pour Madame Geoffroy de Courcel [Martine de Courcel, nee Hallande] avec le respectueux homage, pour Geoffroy de Courcel avec l’amical souvenir And. Malraux”. An unconventional memoire, “Antimémoires” is more Malraux’s reflections on his experiences and achievements. Good and Rare. Est. 2000-3000 French Theatre: Vildrac, Charles (1882-1971). Pseudonym of `Charles Messager’. French playwright, poet and essayist, whose work espoused the ideals of humanitarianism; member of l’Abbaye de Créteil, which he founded with Georges Duhamel; the Prix de poésie Charles Vildrac is name for him. Pair of Autograph Documents Signed “Charles Vildrac”. Fourpage contract for his play “Le Paquebot Tenacity,” on a printed form with fiscal stamp of Marcel Ballot, Agent Dir., also signed by Georges Hebert; two-page contract for the same play on a Société des Auteurs et Compositeurs Dramatiques form with fiscal stamps; Pair of Autograph Letters Signed “Charles Vildrac”. One-page, Nov. 26, 1922 regarding a production of “Le Paquebot” in Barcelona; note card, no date, written front and back regarding the placing of the work La comtesse des digues by Belgian novelist Marie Gevers. Very Good-Fine [4] Est. 120-180

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1248

Collection - Hollywood Actors & Actresses Includes Signed B&W Photos of Jimmy Stewart (3 1/3 x 4), Kirk Douglas (3 ½ x 5 ½), Ernest Borgnine, Eddie Foy, John Forsythe (5x7), and B-Western star Monty Hale (5 x 3 ½); and 2 ½ x 4 B&W snapshots of Tyrone Powers, Cornel Wilde, Clifton Webb, Dana Andrews, Dan Daily, Mark Stevens; Betty Grable, Maureen O’Hara, Linda Darnell, Jeanne Crain, Anne Baxter, and June Haver. Generally Very Fine. [18] Est. 125-225

1249

Judaica: Goldsmid, Sir Isaac Lyon, Esq., 1st Baronet (1778-1859). English financier and one of the leading figures in the Jewish emancipation in the United Kingdom. Goldsmid began business in a firm brokering bullion to the Bank of England and the East India Company; in 1841, he became the first Jewish baronet. Autograph Letter Signed “Isaac L. Goldsmid”. Two and a quarter pages, St. Johns Lodge, Regents Park, 4 August (18)41. A personal message apparently to a colleague regarding earlier correspondence. Quarterfold, Fine. Est. 75-100

1250

Literature: Colette, Sidonie-Gabrielle. Writing under just her surname, this splendid and controversial French novelist, is best known perhaps for her novel “Gigi.” A member of the Belgian Royal Academy and president of the Académie Goncourt (she was also the first woman admitted), Colette was also a Chevalier and Grand Officer of the Legion d’honneur. Autograph Letter Signed “Colette de Jouvenel”. One page, 10 x 8 1/3. Colette’s brief missive in French reads: Sir, I find your letter upon returning from a short vacation. Would you like to come and see me at the Matin [newspaper’s offices]? I go there every day from 5 to 7 o’clock. Distinguished sentiments. Colette was married to Henri de JouveneI, editor of the newspaper “Le Matin” from 1912-1924. Quarter-folded, trace of mounting and pencil mark on back, otherwise Fine-About Very Fine Est. 250-500

1251

Literature: Grey, Zane Pearl. American writer known for his popular adventure novels and stories depicting an idealized American frontier, one of the first millionaire authors. His Riders of the Purple Sage has often been touted as an archetype of the Western genre. B&W Photo Signed “Zane Grey”. 6 ¼ x 8 ½. Accompanied by a four-page note card celebrating the 20th Anniversary of Zane Grey and Harper & Brothers, 1910-1930. Both Very Fine. [2] Est. 200-400

1252

Literature: Kipling, Joseph Rudyard. One of England’s most popular writers and Nobel Prize winner, known best for his enduring adventure yarns (often set in the British Raj - Kipling was born in Bombay) and children’s tales. Newspaper clip on his 66th birthday with Autograph. Clipping pasted on a single sheet of blue-lined paper, autograph above and dated in Kipling’s hand “June 13/30”. Fine. Est. 150-250

1253

Literature: Miller, Henry. American writer, literary innovator, painter, lover of Anaïs Nin, known for such works as Tropic of Cancer, Black Spring, Tropic of Capricorn and The Colossus of Maroussi. The candid sexuality found in Tropic of Cancer - with its resultant obscenity trials, and his later works, is often cited as responsible for the “free speech that we now take for granted in literature.” Autograph Document Signed “Henry Miller”. One page, 8 ½ x 11 typed “Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” Miller’s signature at upper left. Very Fine. Est. 75-150

1254

Medical: First Indiana Sanitary Fair. Oct 1864. U. S. Military Hospital. Nicely illustrated receipt for donation. Oval frame within a rectangular frame. Violet. VF. Est. 150-250

1255

Mexican Leaders, Mining: Diaz, José de la Cruz Porfirio (1830-1915). Accomplished Mexican general, fought in the Mexican War and the War of Reform; leader in the rebellion against the French intervention; President of Mexico (28 Nov.-6 Dec. 1876, 1877-1880, 1884-1911). His long presidency known as “paz porfiriana,” saw internal stability, modernization and economic growth; but his regime grew unpopular because of repression and political stagnation. Diaz fell from power during the Mexican Revolution. Autograph Document Signed with a flourish “Porfirio Diaz”. Two and a quarter pages, folio, with documentary stamps, Mexico, Feb. 12, 1908, title number 40167, printed and handwritten in a fine hand. Legal document for the Agencia de Minería en Ejulta’s formation of a copper mine “San Felipe” in the State of Oaxaca with title to six hectares in favor of “Señor J.F. Perry”. Diaz signs on the second page, along with the signatures of six other individuals on the second and final page. Some pinholes inside margin, age-toned, light fold wear, Fine. Accompanied by an illustration of Diaz, press mark. [2] Est. 150-200

1256

Music: Mercer, Johnny (1909-1976). American lyricist, songwriter and popular singer; co-founder of Capitol Records, winner of four academy awards; Mercer’s many hits include “Jeepers Creepers” (with Harry Warren), “You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby,” “That Old Black Magic” and “The GlowWorm” - `Shine little glow worm. Glitter glitter’. B&W Photo Signed “Johnny Mercer”. 8x10 publicity shot of Mercer relaxing on a couch dedicated to `Arnie Brein’ in Mercer’s strong hand. Very Fine. Est. 125-225

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1257 1257

Napoleonic: O’Meara, Barry Edward (1786-1836). Irish surgeon, founding member of the Reform Club, accompanied Napoleon in his exile to St. Helena, becoming his physician; served aboard HMS Bellerophon, the ship on which Napoleon surrendered in 1815; dismissed in 1818 on suspicion of being the former Emperor’s spy; author of Napoleon in Exile, or A Voice From St. Helena (1822) in which he accuses Sir Hudson Lowe of mistreating Napoleon. Autograph Letter Signed “Barry E. O’Meara”. 2 1/5 pages, 4to, [London], February 8, 1826. He writes Emmanuel-AugustinDieudonné-Joseph, Comte de Las Cases in Paris: “I am much obliged to you for the introduction of your sensible and well informed friend Dr. Grimaud. I introduced him to Mr. Lawrence, who felt great pleasure in conducting him through St. Bartholomew hospital (to which he is a surgeon)…Mr. Lawrence speaks very highly of the pamphlet upon artificial anatomical preparations and expresses his conviction of their ultimately becoming of great utility in this country, where subjects are so very difficult to procure…I am much obliged by your kind offer of your services in making an application to [French financier] M. Laffitte, which I accept with great pleasure, more especially as I am suffering under considerable temporary embarrassment, caused by the failure of Sir Walter Stirling’s bank…” O’Meara adds in a postscript: “You are mistaken about the appointment of the ex-Governor [of St. Helena, Sir Hudson Lowe, who had dismissed him] he is not governor of Ceylon, he is merely employed as a major general and second in command there…It is said that the assassin who attempted your life has been arrested. Is that so?...” Age-toned, with seal hole and some fold wear, otherwise Very Good. French atlas-maker and chamberlain to Napoleon, Las Cases had been on St. Helena with O’Meara and the exiled emperor, and had published what was the canonical account of the exile. Dr. William Lawrence, a friend of Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Shelley, whose views on Vitalism or “animal electricity” influenced the writing of “Frankenstein”, rose to become England’s top surgeon. O’Meara’s comments on the paucity of anatomical subjects in no exaggeration; three years earlier, the infamous William Burke was hung from the gibbet for murdering vagrants so he could sell their corpses to medical schools. Est. 500-1000

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May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1258

1259

Napoleonic; Medicine: Heurteloup, Nicholas (1750-1812). French military physician, and Chief Surgeon of the Grand Armée. His work garnered the praise of Napoleon who made him an Officer of the Legion d’honneur in 1809, and a Baron in 1810. Autograph Document Signed “N. Heurteloup”. On a single folio sheet of Conseil de Santé stationery (written on both sides), dated 17 prairial (5 June) [1795]. Addressing the Commission of the Public Corps, Heurteloup and his fellow Conseil co-signers relate that they have begun designating health officers to serve at the to-be-reestablished Maubuisson Hospital and ask for certain administrative clarification. Quarter-folded and overall well-preserved, Good Fine. Accompanied by a receipt dated 30 Oct. 1829 from the Museum Royal D’Histoire Naturele, and a 1967 receipt and note from the Librarie de L’Abbaye for the sale of the letter which was sold then for Fr.125,80. [4] Est. 100-150 Sci-Fi & Fantasy - Authors: Ray Bradbury. Prolific American Sci-fi, horror and mystery writer, one of the 20th Century’s most celebrated writers, and the writer most responsible for bringing Science Fiction into the literary mainstream. His book, “The Martian Chronicles”. William Morrow, 1997. Signed on front endpaper “Jim! These “Chronicles” From the Martian Himself! Ray Bradbury 2/2/02”; and Christopher Paolini. Young American fantasy writer, known for his “Inheritance” series. His `Inheritance’ books “Eragon” and “Eldest”. NY, Alfred A. Knopf, 2003 and 2005. Signed on the title pages “Christopher Paolini”. As New. [3] Est. 60-90

1260

Sports - Baseball: Mickey Mantle. Baseball giant and batting powerhouse, near legendary centerfielder for the New York Yankees - 18 seasons, considered to be the greatest switch-hitter of all time, inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame (1974) and the Major League Baseball All-Century Team (1999). His autobiography, written with Herb Gluck, “The Mick”. Garden City, NY, Doubleday & Co., 1985, illustrated. Signed on title page “Mickey Mantle #7”. Small tear back dust jacket, otherwise About as New. Est. 150-250

1261

Teapot Dome Scandal. Fall, Albert B. TDS. Congress of the United States letterhead. Fall was the Chairman of the Committee on Mexican Affairs / Foreign Relations. In this document, dated October 4, 1919, he summons Dr. McCaleb to appear before the Committee. Later, Fall would make his own appearances before committees investigating the teapot Dome Scandal, and he would become the first former U.S. Cabinet official sentenced to prison. Light pierce marks upper left, otherwise About Very Fine. Est. 100-150

1262

Theatre: Anderson, Mary Antoinette (1859-1940). American stage actress affectionately known as “Our Mary”, her 15-year successful theatrical career included roles in “Lady of Lyons,” “Winter Tale,” “Pygmalion & Galatea” and “Comedy and Tragedy”. Cabinet Photo Signed “Mary Anderson”. Anderson’s signature on a broad paper-tape pasted down on NY studio card. Some old glue stains on back, FineAbout Very Fine. Est. 75-125

1263

Titanic-Related Sheet Music plus Scientific American magazines. Scientific American May 11, 1912 & Jan. 24, 1914. Both complete, but the bindings are broken. Sheet music to: The Band Played “Nearer My God To Thee”; “Just As The Ship Went Down” [4] Est. 75-150

1264

Treasury Department Internal Revenue Service Prescriptions for Whiskey, Medicinal Alcoho, etc. Issued under the National Prohibition Act. 1920s. All with brown background tints. All VF+. [6] Est. 75-150

1265

20th Century Celebrities. Signed Photos. 8x10s: Werner Franz, cabin boy abroad the Hindenburg on the day it caught fire and was destroyed on May 1937, one of the last survivors of the disaster (two reprint photos of the Disaster); WWII triple ace C.E. “Bud” Anderson; The Dalai Lama (color); young actress Dakota Fanning, Hockey Hall-of-Famer and 1939 & 1941 Stanley Cup Champion Boston Bruin Milt Schmidt (color); professional golfer Gene Sarazen (1902-1999), one of the world’s top golfers in the 1920’s and ‘30s (color); poet, painter and liberal activist Lawrence Ferlinghetti (color); and O.J. Simpson and lawyer Johnnie Cochrane (Simpson and “Dream Team” of Cochrane and Robert Shapiro, color photo); Small format: British sculptor Henry Moore; Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal, and F.W. De Klerk, last state president of apartheid-era South Africa. All Choice. [12] Est. 100-150

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

1266

1267

20th Century Lot — Art, Pop Culture, Entertainment, Sports: Autograph Documents Signed: James R. Schlesinger, US Secretary of Defense (1973-1975) and first Secretary of Energy (1977-1979). One page on US Atomic Energy Commission stationery, Sept. 15, 1971 - thanking Mr. Sporn for support and advice; Alfred Charles Harmsworth, British newspaper and publishing magnate, founder of the “Daily Mirror”, British opinion shaper. 1 ½ page on Daily Mirror stationery, Aug. 9, 1904. Harmsworth tells Sir Cavendish that he is going to Canada for an option on property, is sending him the paper daily and offers “If you want any Mauritian matter…ventilated in my paper…let me know”. Small tear at fold; Henry Hathaway, American film director, known for Westerns. Brief note to (Film editor) Watson Webb from Henry and his wife “Skip” and post card sent from Morocco to Webb by “Skip”; Bill Gadsby, 1940’s-1960’s pro hockey star. One page on Bill Gadsby Hockey Schools stationery, Sept. 18, 2002. Written on behalf of “Bill” by his wife Edna relating a brief background of their family and their travels; Woodstock Ticket, August 15, 1969, $8.00 unused; Signed Photos: American pinup model and photographer Bunny Yaeger (11x15 of Yaeger in early ‘50s displayed in Warhol Museum in 2010); uncertain athlete “Foley” pole vaulting (11x15); Austrian songwriter and composer Robert Stolz (about 4x 5 3/4); Sesame Street’s Elmo / Kevin Clash (color, about 8x10); American pioneer in clay animation and creator of “Gumby” Art Clokey (4x6 color of “Gumby, Pokey” and friends); Signed Disney 8x10s: B&W — Voice of Snow White Adriana Caselotti; Color - Voice of Pinocchio Dickie Jones (2 different); Voice of Sleeping Beauty Mary Costa; Signed Drawing in color of “Dennis the Menace” by Ron Ferdinand.The documents, Very Good to Very Fine, the photos generally Choice [16]Est. 150-250

1268

Miscellaneous and Sundry Lot. Includes: Reid, Whitelaw (1837-1912). American politician, longtime editor of the New York Tribune, close friend of Horace Greeley. Autograph note signed “Whitelaw Reid”; Pamphlet for his funeral service, St. John the Devine, NY, along with notecard; Pamphlet for the funeral service of his wife Reid, Elizabeth Mills (1858-1931), philanthropist and social activist, St. John the Devine, NY; Autograph “Crossing Delancey,” Program, the Jewish Repertory Theatre, signed by Melanie Mayron, Sylvia Kauders, Shirley Stoler, and Jacob Harran; Original 1976 Drawing by Clarence Brown, 8 ½ x11 Velox man of picking up “book litter”; Princess Charlotte of Luxembourg, Autograph portrait of herself, about 7 x 9 ¼, signed, “To the Honorable George W. Ball Acting Secretary of State”; Check drawn on the Munster & Leinster Bank, Dublin, Aug. 11, 1924 to Welsh painter Augustus John; and a Three Percent Consol — Three Pounds Ten Shillings per Cent. Annuities, 1818, issued July 1, 1824, to Mrs. Elizabeth Wordsworth, accompanied by illustration of Three Percent Consols office; the Reid pieces Good-Very Good, the others About Fine-Very Fine. [10] Est. 100-150

1269

Collection: Worldwide Accumulation A diverse group of autographs that span many subject groups, but a great opportunity to acquire a starter collection of autographs or to enhance a current one. Includes TLS and signatures over thematic stamps on 3” x 5” cards. Categories include Animators, Cartoonists, Educators and the Hoover Institution, Explorers, Journalists, Nobel Peace Prize recipients, Religion and Civil Rights Activists, Women and Very Special People: Helen Keller, Bernard Baruch, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Jacques Y. Cousteau, Dr. Robert Ballard, G. Gordon Liddy, Carl Sagan, Thor Heyerdahl, and many, many more. A fantastic collection of autographs that will provide many hours of discovery and fun. Generally Fine. A lot of this size and type is likely to contain some autopen or secretarial examples that have not been identified; as such, it is sold as-is and potential bidders are advised to view it before the auction.[Please contact our offices for a more complete list of names.] [100+] Est. 500-1000

U. S. Senate Impeachment of the President. Admission tickets to Andrew Johnson’s impeachment in 1868. 1) Gallery. April 22, 1868. Green on yellow. 3 ½ x 3.” The corners are rounded, and the is a ½” tear at the top, otherwise VF. 2) May 18th, 1868. Rose ink on rose card. 5 x 3.” The stub still present. VF. [2] Est. 250-350

Maps

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1270

Biblical Maps. William Collins. [2] 1) The Ancient World Showing the probable Settlements of the Descendants of Noah. Countries Mentioned in the Scriptures. Minor margin damage, otherwise VF. 2) Canaan as Divided Among the Twelve Tribes. The Dominions of David & Solomon. VF. Est. 75-150

1271

French Map of North America. 1844. Carte de L’Amerique Septentrional et des Antilles Par Delamarche. 13 x 18”. Very light stains in the margins, otherwise VF. Est. 100-150


May 22-23, 2013 - New York, NY

1272

Map of North America showing its Political Divisions and Recent Discoveries in the Polar Regions. Multicolor. Augustus Mitchell, 1860. 12/2 x 15”. The edges are a bit rough, but otherwise VF. Est. 75-125

1273

United States Map. 1835. 26 x 10 cm. Multicolor. Joseph Thomas, London. Paper reinforcement on the back, otherwise VF. Est. 60-90

1274

United States Map. J. & F. Tallis, London. 1851. 13 x 11”. Mounted on card. Nice vignettes of Washington, Franklin, the Washington Monument, and buffalo hunters. VF+. Est. 100-150

1275

State Maps. Alabama/Florida. Geo. F. Cram. 131/2 x 11”. Piece is missing from one margin; Kansas/Nebraska. Geo. F. Cram. 131/2 x 11”; Nebraska. J. B. Lippincott. 13 x 10 1/2”. Fold reinforced on back. Corner tips missing, otherwise Fine. [3] Est. 100-150

1276

Map of part of the Alabama & Florida Railroad showing the route of the proposed Columbus & Pensacola Rail Road. Accompanying the report of Major J. D. Graham, 1836. 22 x 22”. There is a 4” tear at the top, and a small piece out of the right margin, some fold splitting, otherwise VF. Also included is a Fifth Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of the N.E. & S.W. Ala. R.R. Company. December 18th, 1858 stockholders annual meeting report. VF. Est. 200-300

1277

Map of Liberia. 1845. American Colonization Society. Vicinity of Monrovia inset. 25 x 19”. Fresh and Crisp, with a few minor fold splits. Est. 150-250 END OF SALE THANK YOU!

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The May 2013 Collector’s Series Sale

Notes

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Spink316Cov_SmytheJanCSScov 4/29/13 10:45 AM Page 2

GROUP CHAIRMAN AND CEO Olivier D. Stocker YOUR SPECIALISTS STAMPS UK - Tim Hirsch Guy Croton David Parsons Nick Startup Neill Granger Paul Mathews Dominic Savastano Tom Smith USA - George Eveleth Arthur Poudrier EUROPE - Guido Craveri Fernando Martínez CHINA - Anna Lee COINS UK - Mike Veissid Paul Dawson Richard Bishop William MacKay Eleanor Charlotte Dix Tim Robson Barbara Mears John Pett

SALE CALENDAR 2013 STAMPS 21 May 5 June 28 June 10/11 July 15/16 August 10 September 11 September 21 September 21/22 September 21 September

The award winning Medina collection of India Part II. Specialised Great Britain sale The Fordwater Collection of Canada and BNA Colonies The Collector's Series Sale The Collector's Series Sale The award winning Medina collection of India and States Part III. The award winning Medina collection of Great Britain The Japanese Occupation Issues of South East Asia Stamps and Covers of South East Asia Stamps and Covers of South East Asia

London London New York London New York London London Singapore Singapore Singapore

13025 13026 143 13027 144 13028 13029 13038 13030 13030

The Collector's Series Sale Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals Tibetan Coins from the Nick Rhodes Collection The Collector's Series Sale North East Indian Coins from the Nick Rhodes Collection Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals Ancient, English & Foreign Coins and Commemorative Medals

New York London Hong Kong New York London London London

316 13013 13020 317 13019 13014 13015

The Collector's Series Sale The David Kirch Collection of English Provincial Banknotes Part IV: The North of England The Collector's Series Sale World Banknotes The Ibrahim Salem Collection of African Banknotes World Banknotes

New York London New York London London London

316 13035 317 13018 13037 13034

Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria Orders, Decoration, Campaign Medals & Militaria

London London London

13001 13002 13003

The Collector's Series Sale Bonds and Share Certificates of the World The Collector's Series Sale Bonds and Share Certificates of the World

New York London New York London

316 13016 317 13017

The Collector's Series Sale The Collector's Series Sale

New York New York

316 317

An Evening of Exceptional Wines An Evening of Exceptional Wines

Hong Kong Singapore

USA - Stephen Goldsmith Greg Cole Normand Pepin CHINA - Mark Li BANKNOTES, BONDS & SHARES UK - Barnaby Faull Mike Veissid Andrew Pattison Tom Badley USA - Stephen Goldsmith China - Mark Li ORDERS, DECORATIONS, MEDALS & MILITARIA UK - Mark Quayle Oliver Pepys BOOKS UK - Philip Skingley Annie Beadle AUTOGRAPHS

COINS 22/23 May 27 June 21 August 28/29 August 24 September 27 September 3 December

USA - Stephen Goldsmith WINES CHINA - China – Anna Lee Guillaume Willk-Fabia YOUR EUROPE TEAM (LONDON - LUGANO)

Miroslava Adusei-Poku

Alison Bennet

Chairman’s Office Monica Kruber Charles Blane Directors Tim Hirsch Anthony Spink Auction & Client Management Team Luca Borgo Rita Ariete Sarah Schmitz John Winchcombe Harry Gladwin María Martínez Maurizio Schenini

Marco Fiori Mina Bhagat

Finance Dennis Muriu

Alison Kinnaird Billy Tumelty Claire Greenhill

IT & Administration Berdia Qamarauli Attila Gyanyi Liz Cones Curlene Spencer Tom Robinson Cristina Dugoni Giacomo Canzi

BANKNOTES 22/23 May 20 June 28/29 August 1/2 October 3 October 5 December

MEDALS 25 April 25 July 21 November

BONDS AND SHARES 22/23 May 7 June 28/29 August 28 November

YOUR AMERICA TEAM (NEW YORK - DALLAS) Chairman Emeritus John Herzog Auction Administration and Marketing & Design Lori Lewin

AUTOGRAPHS 22/23 May 28/29 August

Finance & Administration Sam Qureshi Auctioneers Stephen Goldsmith

WINES June September

YOUR ASIA TEAM (HONG KONG - SINGAPORE) Vice Chairman Anna Lee Administration Amy Yung Newton Tsang Raymond Tat Gary Tan

The above sale dates are subject to change Spink offers the following services: – VALuATIONS FOR INSuRANCE AND PROBATE FOR INDIVIDuAL ITEMS OR WHOLE COLLECTIONS – – SALES ON A COMMISSION BASIS EITHER OF INDIVIDuAL PIECES OR WHOLE COLLECTIONS –

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May 22-23, 2013 • New York

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COLLECTOR’ S S ERIES THE ARTESIAN COLLECTION OF NATIONAL BANK NOTES, A FINE SELECTION OF TEXAS OBSOLETES, A FINAL OFFERING OF ITEMS FROM THE GEORGE ARMSTRONG CUSTER SHOE BOX, A CHOICE SELECTION OF BONDS AND SHARES, AND A MAJOR GROUPING OF U.S. AND WORLD COINS AND PAPER MONEY


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