DALLAS, TX.- After the conclusion of World War I, most Americans became accustomed to using the more convenient paper currency after no gold coinage was issued between 1917 and 1919, and no silver dollars since 1904.
Double eagles were still produced, though, because they were better-suited for settling large accounts in foreign trade, and the government was required to back its currency with gold. The Philadelphia Mint struck nearly 1.8 million Saint-Gaudens double eagles in 1929 ... of which 1.75 million never left Mint vaults, and 74 were destroyed in assay testing. The remaining cache of 29,676 was either stored in the Mint cashiers safe or delivered to the Treasurers office to help pay depositors or supply sales to collectors. Of those, 28,500 undistributed coins from the Treasurers office, the Cashiers vault and untested assay remainders were returned to the Mint in 1931 to await melting with the bulk of the mintage, leaving just 1,176 of the 1929 double eagles that were ever released into private hands, no more than 350 of which have survived, with most examples in lower Mint State grades.
The 1929 Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle, MS65+ PCGS that is among the highlights in
Heritages March 28-31 US Coins Signature® Auction is one of those rare high-grade surviving examples.
It is exceedingly rare to find a 1929 Saint-Gaudens double eagle with such a high grade, says Todd Imhof, Executive Vice President at Heritage Auctions, and it is nearly impossible to find one graded higher. Most of the examples were never available to the public, and of those that were, it is highly unusual to find one in the condition of the example offered here.
Another prized double eagle will be up for grabs when a 1921 Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle, MS62 PCGS crosses the block. This magnificent example is a leading condition rarity in the series, one of the few issues from the 1920s that is seen more often in circulated grades than in Mint State. Of the 528,000 pieces originally minted, research by Roger W. Burdette suggests that 527,000 were melted under the terms of the Gold Act of 1933 ... making this example an undeniable rarity. Burdette believes only 175 remain in existence.
The 1882 Double Eagle AU58 NGC, on the other hand, is a survivor from a much smaller original population. Unlike the 1883, 1884 and 1887 versions, the 1882 was not a proof-only issue, but it might as well have been, as just 571 were struck for circulation of which maybe two dozen are believed to remain in any grade. The Smithsonian Institution has two examples of the proof 1882 double eagle, but is without an example of the circulation strike. The minute number of survivors is explained, in part, by the fact that collectors at the time preferred proofs almost exclusively. This example is one of just five submitted in this grade at NGC, which reports just one graded finer.
A 1799 B-16 BB-158 Dollar, MS63 NGC is from one of the most plentiful 1799 varieties, but examples in Mint State are exceedingly rare. Fewer than a dozen BB-158 are certified MS60 or finer, including the example offered here.
An 1860 Clark, Gruber Eagle, K-3, MS61 NGC, CAC comes from the one-time banking partnership in Leavenworth, Kansas. The 1860 Clark, Gruber & Co. ten dollar pieces, like all 1860 issues, were struck in unalloyed gold, causing the soft gold coins to wear down quickly, making examples in Mint State exceedingly rare (a small amount of silver was added to the 1861 issues to reduce the problem). The obverse design features the artists conception of Pikes Peak that was not very realistic, and subsequently was replaced the following year by the more familiary head of Liberty.
An 1853 Moffat & Co. Twenty Dollar, AU55 NGC, CAC, K-19 is one of only about 50 examples believed to have survived. Moffat twenty dollar gold pieces were produced toward the end of the Territorial gold issues of the California Gold Rush, in response to one of the recurring shortages of gold coinage that were so prevelant in the region.
A 1793 Chain Cent, AMERICA, S-3, B-4, Low R.3, XF45 NGC represents one of five die combinations for Americas first large cent coinage. Based on Elias Boudinots 1795 report on the Mint, it is certain that Chief Coiner Henry Voigt engraved these early dies for the 1793 copper coins.
Other top lots include, but are not limited to:
A 1915-S Panama-Pacific Round Fifty Dollar, MS65+ NGC
An 1859-S Seated Dollar, MS64, NGC
An 1801 Draped Bust, Heraldic Eagle Half Dollar O-101, T-2, R.2, AU58 NGC
An 1875 Gold Dollar MS63 PCGS. CAC