DALLAS, TX.- Think of the criteria that make specific banknotes appeal to serious collectors, a list that includes rarity, grade, high denomination and limited times being available to the public.
All of those factors come together in a Fr. 1133-D $1,000 1918 Federal Reserve Note PMG Gem Uncirculated 66 EPQ from the Thomas Collup Collection, a magnificent note that is tied for the finest-graded of all large-size thousands, regardless of type, that is among the top attractions at
Heritage Auctions' Long Beach Expo US Currency Signature ® Auction September 13-15. This auction marks the first time Heritage ever has offered a 1918 $1,000 at this grade level.
"This is an exceptional note, one that has been off the market for about 30 years and will become an immediate centerpiece in a new collection," says Dustin Johnston, Vice President of Currency at Heritage Auctions. Large-denomination banknotes are prized by many collectors, and the rarity and grade put this beautiful example at the top of many wishlists. This design is found on Friedberg numbers 1133-A through 1133b-L; PMG has graded 108 examples in that number range and has given out just one other equal grade, and none higher. This is an absolute must-have for collectors of large-denomination notes."
The Collup Collection is one of the finest assemblages, in terms of eye appeal and technical grades, ever handled at Heritage Auctions; in addition to the coins in this auction, he also compiled an extraordinary archive of paper money, more than 270 lots of which will be in play in Heritage's World Paper Money Signature ® Auction November 9.
Other top lots from the collection include, but are not limted to:
A La Crosse, WI - $2 1875 Fr. 391 The La Crosse National Bank Ch. # 2344 PMG Gem Uncirculated 65 EPQ
A Fr. 302 $10 1908 Silver Certificate PMG Gem Uncirculated 66 EPQ tied for the finest graded example
Another highlight with an even larger denomination is a Fr. 2231-A $10,000 1934 Federal Reserve Note. PMG Choice Uncirculated 64 EPQ, which returns to the auction block for the first time since it was sold in 2005 at Heritage's FUN auction. PMG has graded just 18 examples of this elusive note, and this magnificent example is tied for the highest-graded. The exceptional quality is even more pronounced considering the fact that among all small-size $10,000 FRNs, PMG has graded only four equal and five higher. Large-denomination always are coveted. The $10,000 note trails only the $100,000 gold certificate issued in 1934, and it was produced only for bank use not intended for general circulation. The allure of this banknote is only magnified by the low A00000185A serial number and the prized EPQ grade modifier.
Unseen at auction since Heritage's September 2007 Long Beach auction is a Fr. 2221-G $5,000 1934 Federal Reserve Note. PCGS Banknote Choice Unc 64 serial number G00000998A. With near-perfect centering of the face, this beauty shows traces of embossing behind the right serial number. The last Fr. 2221-G that offered at Heritage Auctions was a PMG 64 EPQ example that realized $300,000 in May 2022.
Another exceptional compilation featured in the auction is the collection of Neil A. Chiappa, who assembled what many consider to be one of the finest collections of Virginia Obsoletes and Scrip, with a specialty of issues from the city of Richmond.
Among the top attractions in the 64-lot trove:
The better of just two known examples of a Richmond, VA- Commonwealth of Virginia $500 Sep. 25, 1861 Cr. 1861-B PMG Choice Very Fine 35 the largest denomination issued by the Commonwealth during the Civil War
A Rare Bank of Richmond High Denomination Sheet once part of the legendary Schingoethe Collection
A rare Richmond, VA- Commonwealth of Virginia $100 Aug. 13, 1861 Cr. 1 Jones-Littlefield VT02-06 PMG About Uncirculated 53
More from this extraordinary collection will be up for grabs Nov. 12 when Heritage presents The Neil A. Chiappa Collection of Virginia Obsolete Currency Auction.
A Fr. 187j $1,000 1880 Legal Tender PMG Very Fine 30 Net includes a Columbus in His Study vignette featuring a portrait of DeWitt Clinton, who was governor of New York from 1825-28 and served three stints as the mayor of New York City. Track & Price lists 15 different serial numbers for this Friedberg number, only one of which is under institutional collection, but only half of those 14 Fr. 187j notes have appeared in the last 25 years at auction, where demand for this number always is high.
A near-perfect Fr. 236 $1 1899 Silver Certificate PCGS Banknote Superb Gem Unc 69 PPQ is one of two Black Eagles graded 69 PPQ by both NGC and PCGS. Heritage sold another example in the 2022 FUN auction for $46,500; this example, bearing the Speelman-White signature combination and new to the census, could similar demand. PCGS Banknote recently highlighted this exemplary Fr. 236 in their June 16, 2023 news article found on its website entitled, "Approaching Perfection - One in a Billion?" In the article, PCGS Banknote suggests that the 69 PPQ Black Eagle in this lot "could very easily be the finest Black Eagle in existence" and closes with "could this note be, literally, one in a billion?" because more than 3 billion Black Eagles were printed during the years 1899-1929 across Friedberg numbers 226-236.
"Large-denomination notes always capture the eye and attention of currency collectors," Johnston says," and this auction is full of attractive large-denomination options for collectors at all levels."