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- Descripción:
1795 C-1 Lettered Edge R2. PCGS graded MS-63 Brown. Frosty light steel brown with at least 5% of the original mint red remaining. Excellent eye appeal. The only marks are a small spot of darker bluish steel toning (not carbon) below CA in AMERICA, a faint hairline scratch on the cheek from the left corner of the eye down to just below the earlobe, and a thin nick in the field near the dentils off the chin. LDS, Manley state 2.0. The obverse fields are now frosty rather than reflective and the bulge at AME is clear. Weight 108.3 grains. Our grade is MS60. Listed in the Breen/Hanson census on page 130 in the encyclopedia. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 2; tied with the preceding example for finest graded. (PCGS # 35067) Estimate Value $35,000 - UP Ex Howard Rounds Newcomb (valued by Newcomb at $20.00) 1935 (privately)-B. Max Mehl 1935 (privately)-Col. E. H. R. Green 6/8/1936-Green Estate (appraised by the Estate at $35.00 on 8/9/1937) sold in 4/1943 for $40.02-the Newman/Johnson partnership-Eric P. Newman-EPNNES Nov/Dec 1980-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 95.1.3).
Price Realized: $92000
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 24.
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- Descripción:
1795 C-1 Lettered Edge R2. PCGS graded MS-63 Brown. A sharp, attractive half cent but there are a few very faint hairlines on the portrait and what appears to be a very thin layer of lacquer or some similar substance covering the reverse. The obverse is lustrous bluish steel with traces of faded red in protected areas. The reverse is glossy light olive brown. The only notable mark is a tiny V-shaped struck-through line at the dentils under the 5 in the date (caused by a tiny piece of debris stuck on the die). MDS, Manley state 2.0 early, with a gentle bulge at AME. The obverse fields are slightly reflective giving that side great eye appeal in spite of the faint hairlines. Listed in the Breen/Hanson census on page 129 in his encyclopedia. Our grade is AU58+, very close to Mint State. Weight 105.6 grains. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 2; tied for finest graded (with the following lot). (PCGS # 35067) Estimate Value $35,000 - UP Ex Henry Clay Miller, Thomas L. Elder 4/13/1917:1026 ($70)-Lewis C. Gehring, Thomas L. Elder 8/1921:993 (as "Proof") ($60)-Henry Chapman-Colonel E. H. R. Green 6/8/1936-Green Estate 4/1943-the Newman/Johnson partnership-Burdette G. Johnson 3/6/1944 ($100)-Thomas L. Elder-Philip M. Showers, Stack's 1969 (privately)-Willis Harrington duPont-Fred S. "Freddy" Werner 2/1976-Superior Stamp and Coin Company, Inc., 2/1976-Joe Flynn and Son Rare Coins, Inc. (Joseph S. Flynn, Jr.) 4/20/1976 (privately)-R. Tettenhorst-EPNNES-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 95.1.2).
Price Realized: $28750
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 23.
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- Descripción:
1795 C-1 Lettered Edge R2. PCGS graded MS-63 Brown. A sharp, attractive half cent but there are a few very faint hairlines on the portrait and what appears to be a very thin layer of lacquer or some similar substance covering the reverse. The obverse is lustrous bluish steel with traces of faded red in protected areas. The reverse is glossy light olive brown. The only notable mark is a tiny V-shaped struck-through line at the dentils under the 5 in the date (caused by a tiny piece of debris stuck on the die). MDS, Manley state 2.0 early, with a gentle bulge at AME. The obverse fields are slightly reflective giving that side great eye appeal in spite of the faint hairlines. Listed in the Breen/Hanson census on page 129 in his encyclopedia. Our grade is AU58+, very close to Mint State. Weight 105.6 grains. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 2; tied for finest graded (with the following lot). (PCGS # 35067) Estimate Value $35,000 - UP Ex Henry Clay Miller, Thomas L. Elder 4/13/1917:1026 ($70)-Lewis C. Gehring, Thomas L. Elder 8/1921:993 (as "Proof") ($60)-Henry Chapman-Colonel E. H. R. Green 6/8/1936-Green Estate 4/1943-the Newman/Johnson partnership-Burdette G. Johnson 3/6/1944 ($100)-Thomas L. Elder-Philip M. Showers, Stack's 1969 (privately)-Willis Harrington duPont-Fred S. "Freddy" Werner 2/1976-Superior Stamp and Coin Company, Inc., 2/1976-Joe Flynn and Son Rare Coins, Inc. (Joseph S. Flynn, Jr.) 4/20/1976 (privately)-R. Tettenhorst-EPNNES-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 95.1.2).
Price Realized: $28750
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 23.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-9 R2. PCGS graded MS-65 Red & Brown. CAC. Choice lustrous light steel brown with 20% of the original mint red remaining on the obverse. A truly beautiful example of the "High Relief Head" type. The only defects, and they are barely visible, are a tiny tick on the middle of the neck, another on the throat, and a tiny nick under the C in AMERICA. LDS, Manley state 3.0, with a rim cud break covering 4-5 dentils left of the fraction. The die crack from the rim to the center of the cap is clear. Sharply struck except for some weakness at the top of the E in CENT, which is opposite the highest peak of the hair. A beautiful half cent. Our grade is MS63+, close to MS64 and certainly near the top of the condition census for the variety. This is the second and third example listed in the Breen/Hanson condition census (page 119, both listings being for the same coin). The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 1; the finest graded for the variety. (PCGS # 35064) Estimate Value $75,000 - UP Ex Alto collection, Stack's 12/11/1970:514 (as "The Finest Known") ($2,300)-to Walter Breen for Dr. James M. McCleery- Martin Haber (South Miami Rare Coins)-Auction '90 (Superior Galleries) lot 1003-to David W. Akers for Martin Haber (South Miami Rare Coins)-Jerry Treglia 8/14/1991-R. Tettenhorst-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.9.6).
Price Realized: $402500
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 22.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-9 R2. PCGS graded MS-65 Red & Brown. CAC. Choice lustrous light steel brown with 20% of the original mint red remaining on the obverse. A truly beautiful example of the "High Relief Head" type. The only defects, and they are barely visible, are a tiny tick on the middle of the neck, another on the throat, and a tiny nick under the C in AMERICA. LDS, Manley state 3.0, with a rim cud break covering 4-5 dentils left of the fraction. The die crack from the rim to the center of the cap is clear. Sharply struck except for some weakness at the top of the E in CENT, which is opposite the highest peak of the hair. A beautiful half cent. Our grade is MS63+, close to MS64 and certainly near the top of the condition census for the variety. This is the second and third example listed in the Breen/Hanson condition census (page 119, both listings being for the same coin). The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 1; the finest graded for the variety. (PCGS # 35064) Estimate Value $75,000 - UP Ex Alto collection, Stack's 12/11/1970:514 (as "The Finest Known") ($2,300)-to Walter Breen for Dr. James M. McCleery- Martin Haber (South Miami Rare Coins)-Auction '90 (Superior Galleries) lot 1003-to David W. Akers for Martin Haber (South Miami Rare Coins)-Jerry Treglia 8/14/1991-R. Tettenhorst-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.9.6).
Price Realized: $402500
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 22.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-8 R5. PCGS graded EF-45 Brown. CAC. Glossy medium brown and light chocolate. Lightly worn with smooth surfaces that offer great eye appeal. The notable marks are a nick-like rim chip below the right ribbon end and a minor planchet lamination at ES-O, both as struck, plus a tiny pinprick or planchet chip on the jawline. EDS, Manley state 1.0, before the die crack from the dentils down through the second T in STATES. The reverse is misaligned slightly to K-3 but the obverse is almost perfectly centered on the planchet. Plated in the Breen encyclopedia (page 116) to illustrate his state III, and the reverse is plated on page 14 in the second edition of the Cohen book to show the unbroken die state. Our grade is VF30+, close to VF35. Near the top of the condition census for this very scarce die variety. Weight 109.1 grains. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 2; tied for finest graded of the variety. (PCGS # 35060) Estimate Value $10,000 - UP Ex Philip M. Showers, Stack's 1969 (privately)-Willis Harrington duPont- Fred S. "Freddy" Werner 2/1976-Superior Stamp and Coin Company, Inc., 2/1976-Joe Flynn and Son Rare Coins, Inc. (Joseph S. Flynn, Jr.) 4/20/1976-R. Tettenhorst-EPNNES-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.8.3).
Price Realized: $32200
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 21.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-7 R5. PCGS graded MS-67 Red & Brown. CAC. Lustrous mint red mellowing to light steel brown, at least a third of the original color remaining. The fields are reflective and the eye appeal is amazing. This is a true "WOW!" coin. The hair wave left of the ear is especially high on this die, which was used to strike the C-7, 8, and 9 die varieties, and it is often referred to as the "High Relief Head" type. And because the designs are raised well above the rims they wore down rapidly. But on this sharply-struck piece the highest wave left of the ear retains its intended character, coming to a prominent peak well above the rest of the hair as the engraver intended. (Stacking these would have presented quite a challenge.) No defects and virtually unimprovable in every respect. A tiny planchet chip hidden in the dentils right of the Y in LIBERTY is the best identifying mark, but it is inconsequential. We believe this is the finest obtainable 1794 half cent of any variety (a comparable 1794 C-7 is impounded in the British Museum, but a recent photograph indicates it retains little if any mint color and the luster is subdued by a thin layer of oxidation creating a chestnut brown tone). Current PCGS records show one other early half cent graded as MS67RB (a 1796 C-1 No Pole), which makes this piece tied for the finest graded early half cent (1793-1797). An undisputed highlight of this premier collection of half cents. This is the 1794 shown in Breen's color plate at the back of his encyclopedia and on pages 87 (to illustrate the "High Relief Head" and "Cent Type Reverse"), 88 (to show the Large Edge Letters), 114 (to illustrate the variety), and on that same page for his die state I. This piece is also plated on page 14 in Cohen's second edition. MDS, Manley die state 2.0 early. Our grade is MS67. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 1; the only RB graded. (PCGS # 35058) Estimate Value $500,000 - UP Discovered in Basel, Switzerland, in early 1975-Fred Weinberg (Numismatics, Ltd., advertised in Coin World 8/17/1977 and 5/24/1978)-via Julian Leidman-R. Tettenhorst-EPNNES-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.7.4). "I started going to Europe in 1973, with Harry Gordon, who was the owner of Numismatics, Ltd., in Beverly Hills (I was almost 23 years old when I started there). We would go to Europe every 5-6 weeks - London, Paris, Brussels, Zurich (and lots of other cities in Switzerland too) - buying US Gold coins in large quantities.In early 1977, on one of our trips to Zurich, our contact and good friend there, Heiner Stuker (a major Swiss coin dealer), told us about a small local coin show being held in a small town, about 1.5-2 hours outside of Zurich. It was a Friday, I believe, and all three of us went to the show - a very very small town, in the middle of nowhere (but beautiful). The show was held in a Round building (yes, round! I had never seen a round building like this before), and when we walked in, there were small, simple tables with local dealers/vest pocket dealers showing their material in trays - I don't think there were more than one or two dealers that had show cases there - the coins were in different. types of velvet trays for viewing.At that point, all I had learned to say in Swiss Deutch (Swiss German) was the phrase: "Habben ze Americanisha Gold Munzen?" (Do you have any American Gold coins?) I walked around asking that question, finding a few coins here and there, but nothing like we usually bought at the Banks in the Cities we frequented. As I'm making my rounds (literally!!) I get to a table with an older gentleman and his wife; they didn't look like coin dealers, but more like farmers who had a small amount of European copper and silver coins on their trays - absolutely nothing special or rare, as far as I could tell. I gave them my usual "Habben Ze Americanisha Gold Munzen?" question, and the man looked at me, and started to talk fast in Swiss German - which I really didn't understand much of.......I repeated "American Gold Munzen", and he hesitated for a second, turned around, and went into his folio (some type of briefcase behind the table), and pulled out two coins - a 1916 Standing Liberty Quarter in VF, and a 1794 Half Cent.I remember this like it was yesterday - the round room was kinda dark, and there were no table lamps at his table - so, my very first look/glance at the coin, and I said to myself: "That looks too good to be real - must be a restrike - wait, they didn't make any restrikes of 1794 half cents!" - all in 2 seconds, in my mind! At 3 seconds, I knew it was real, and I asked "Vass iss da price?" (What is the price?) He quoted me in Swiss Francs, which I calculated quickly as being about U.S. $1,200 or so. I quickly paid him for both coins, found Harry and Heiner, and showed them the two pieces I bought. I told Heiner how wonderful the Half Cent was, and he went over to the table, and asked the man about the coins,and if he had more. He replied something to the effect that 'the copper coin has been in this village for along time, passed down from family'. The impression I got at the time was that someone from this village went to the United States in 1794/95, and brought back this lowest-denomination US coin as a souvenir of their visit - and it had been in this small town/village since that time! At the show there, I didn't know it was a High Relief Head - I just thought that as a real nice 1794 Half Cent, it had to be worth $5k or more. I was so exited about this coin, that I didn't put it in our Brinks shipment of Gold, going back to Beverly Hills - I carried in my briefcase home, as I didn't want it to get caught up in US customs at LAX, and be delayed for some reason.Back at Numismatics, Ltd., I started researching the coin, and soon found out it was a "High Relief Head", and probably (at the time) the finest known of that variety. As the months went by, the value of the coin, in my head, went to $10K, $15k, etc. - till about 6 months later, when we printed up a very nice small brochure on the coin, and priced it at $35,000.......didn't sell it at the next 2-3 shows, and so about 2 months later, we entered into discussions with Julian Leidman, who had 'The' customer for it - and, if I remember correctly, we sold it to Julian for $30,000 (I might be off by a grand or two).I have very fond memories of this coin - it was my first major rarity that I was responsible for figuring out what I had - the Die Variety, history, pricing, etc......and I toughly enjoyed all the time spent researching it......"Fred Weinberg.
Price Realized: $1150000
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 20.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-7 R5. PCGS graded MS-67 Red & Brown. CAC. Lustrous mint red mellowing to light steel brown, at least a third of the original color remaining. The fields are reflective and the eye appeal is amazing. This is a true "WOW!" coin. The hair wave left of the ear is especially high on this die, which was used to strike the C-7, 8, and 9 die varieties, and it is often referred to as the "High Relief Head" type. And because the designs are raised well above the rims they wore down rapidly. But on this sharply-struck piece the highest wave left of the ear retains its intended character, coming to a prominent peak well above the rest of the hair as the engraver intended. (Stacking these would have presented quite a challenge.) No defects and virtually unimprovable in every respect. A tiny planchet chip hidden in the dentils right of the Y in LIBERTY is the best identifying mark, but it is inconsequential. We believe this is the finest obtainable 1794 half cent of any variety (a comparable 1794 C-7 is impounded in the British Museum, but a recent photograph indicates it retains little if any mint color and the luster is subdued by a thin layer of oxidation creating a chestnut brown tone). Current PCGS records show one other early half cent graded as MS67RB (a 1796 C-1 No Pole), which makes this piece tied for the finest graded early half cent (1793-1797). An undisputed highlight of this premier collection of half cents. This is the 1794 shown in Breen's color plate at the back of his encyclopedia and on pages 87 (to illustrate the "High Relief Head" and "Cent Type Reverse"), 88 (to show the Large Edge Letters), 114 (to illustrate the variety), and on that same page for his die state I. This piece is also plated on page 14 in Cohen's second edition. MDS, Manley die state 2.0 early. Our grade is MS67. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 1; the only RB graded. (PCGS # 35058) Estimate Value $500,000 - UP Discovered in Basel, Switzerland, in early 1975-Fred Weinberg (Numismatics, Ltd., advertised in Coin World 8/17/1977 and 5/24/1978)-via Julian Leidman-R. Tettenhorst-EPNNES-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.7.4). "I started going to Europe in 1973, with Harry Gordon, who was the owner of Numismatics, Ltd., in Beverly Hills (I was almost 23 years old when I started there). We would go to Europe every 5-6 weeks - London, Paris, Brussels, Zurich (and lots of other cities in Switzerland too) - buying US Gold coins in large quantities.In early 1977, on one of our trips to Zurich, our contact and good friend there, Heiner Stuker (a major Swiss coin dealer), told us about a small local coin show being held in a small town, about 1.5-2 hours outside of Zurich. It was a Friday, I believe, and all three of us went to the show - a very very small town, in the middle of nowhere (but beautiful). The show was held in a Round building (yes, round! I had never seen a round building like this before), and when we walked in, there were small, simple tables with local dealers/vest pocket dealers showing their material in trays - I don't think there were more than one or two dealers that had show cases there - the coins were in different. types of velvet trays for viewing.At that point, all I had learned to say in Swiss Deutch (Swiss German) was the phrase: "Habben ze Americanisha Gold Munzen?" (Do you have any American Gold coins?) I walked around asking that question, finding a few coins here and there, but nothing like we usually bought at the Banks in the Cities we frequented. As I'm making my rounds (literally!!) I get to a table with an older gentleman and his wife; they didn't look like coin dealers, but more like farmers who had a small amount of European copper and silver coins on their trays - absolutely nothing special or rare, as far as I could tell. I gave them my usual "Habben Ze Americanisha Gold Munzen?" question, and the man looked at me, and started to talk fast in Swiss German - which I really didn't understand much of.......I repeated "American Gold Munzen", and he hesitated for a second, turned around, and went into his folio (some type of briefcase behind the table), and pulled out two coins - a 1916 Standing Liberty Quarter in VF, and a 1794 Half Cent.I remember this like it was yesterday - the round room was kinda dark, and there were no table lamps at his table - so, my very first look/glance at the coin, and I said to myself: "That looks too good to be real - must be a restrike - wait, they didn't make any restrikes of 1794 half cents!" - all in 2 seconds, in my mind! At 3 seconds, I knew it was real, and I asked "Vass iss da price?" (What is the price?) He quoted me in Swiss Francs, which I calculated quickly as being about U.S. $1,200 or so. I quickly paid him for both coins, found Harry and Heiner, and showed them the two pieces I bought. I told Heiner how wonderful the Half Cent was, and he went over to the table, and asked the man about the coins,and if he had more. He replied something to the effect that 'the copper coin has been in this village for along time, passed down from family'. The impression I got at the time was that someone from this village went to the United States in 1794/95, and brought back this lowest-denomination US coin as a souvenir of their visit - and it had been in this small town/village since that time! At the show there, I didn't know it was a High Relief Head - I just thought that as a real nice 1794 Half Cent, it had to be worth $5k or more. I was so exited about this coin, that I didn't put it in our Brinks shipment of Gold, going back to Beverly Hills - I carried in my briefcase home, as I didn't want it to get caught up in US customs at LAX, and be delayed for some reason.Back at Numismatics, Ltd., I started researching the coin, and soon found out it was a "High Relief Head", and probably (at the time) the finest known of that variety. As the months went by, the value of the coin, in my head, went to $10K, $15k, etc. - till about 6 months later, when we printed up a very nice small brochure on the coin, and priced it at $35,000.......didn't sell it at the next 2-3 shows, and so about 2 months later, we entered into discussions with Julian Leidman, who had 'The' customer for it - and, if I remember correctly, we sold it to Julian for $30,000 (I might be off by a grand or two).I have very fond memories of this coin - it was my first major rarity that I was responsible for figuring out what I had - the Die Variety, history, pricing, etc......and I toughly enjoyed all the time spent researching it......"Fred Weinberg.
Price Realized: $1150000
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 20.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-6b Large Edge Letters R8+ (Unique) PCGS Genuine Fine Details, Cleaning. Sharpness VF20 but covered with myriad very fine hairline scratches, strongest on the obverse. Appears as if it was lightly abraded with a stiff brush, but the eye appeal is still nice for the grade. Slightly glossy light steel brown. There are very few signs of contact (other than the brush lines). A small pinprick just off the tip of the left wreath stem and a small nick under the left ribbon end are the notable marks. The strike was strong and well balanced but very slightly off center to K-7.5. Strong die clashmarks show around the portrait. Weight 103.6 grains. Plated in the Breen (page 102) and Manley (page 36) references to illustrate the variety. The Large Edge Letters variety was announced in the March 1977 edition of Penny-Wise, the official journal of the Early American Coppers Club, but a second example has yet to surface. Obviously this piece is the ultimate key to a complete collection of half cents. Our grade is VF20 sharpness net VG10. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 0; none graded. (PCGS # 35051) Estimate Value $85,000 - UP Ex Willard C. Blaisdell-Delmar N. Bland 5/1972-William K. Raymond (who first recognized the edge variant)-Raymond Fixed Price List 8/1977, sold in 8/1978 to William R. (Bill) Weber 1988-Roger S. Cohen, Jr., Superior Galleries 2/2/1992:30 (via Stuart A. Levine)-R. Tettenhorst-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.6b.1).
Price Realized: $161000
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 19.
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- Descripción:
1794 C-6b Large Edge Letters R8+ (Unique) PCGS Genuine Fine Details, Cleaning. Sharpness VF20 but covered with myriad very fine hairline scratches, strongest on the obverse. Appears as if it was lightly abraded with a stiff brush, but the eye appeal is still nice for the grade. Slightly glossy light steel brown. There are very few signs of contact (other than the brush lines). A small pinprick just off the tip of the left wreath stem and a small nick under the left ribbon end are the notable marks. The strike was strong and well balanced but very slightly off center to K-7.5. Strong die clashmarks show around the portrait. Weight 103.6 grains. Plated in the Breen (page 102) and Manley (page 36) references to illustrate the variety. The Large Edge Letters variety was announced in the March 1977 edition of Penny-Wise, the official journal of the Early American Coppers Club, but a second example has yet to surface. Obviously this piece is the ultimate key to a complete collection of half cents. Our grade is VF20 sharpness net VG10. The attribution and Missouri Cabinet provenance are shown on the PCGS label. PCGS population 0; none graded. (PCGS # 35051) Estimate Value $85,000 - UP Ex Willard C. Blaisdell-Delmar N. Bland 5/1972-William K. Raymond (who first recognized the edge variant)-Raymond Fixed Price List 8/1977, sold in 8/1978 to William R. (Bill) Weber 1988-Roger S. Cohen, Jr., Superior Galleries 2/2/1992:30 (via Stuart A. Levine)-R. Tettenhorst-Missouri Cabinet (Mocab 94.6b.1).
Price Realized: $161000
Images and description courtesy of Ira and Larry Goldberg Coins and Collectibles, Los Angeles, CA.
From Goldberg's sale of the Missouri Cabinet Collection, 1/26/2014, lot 19.