ANS EXHIBIT REOPENS IN NEW YORK Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 3, January 16, 2005, Article 4

    ANS EXHIBIT REOPENS IN NEW YORK

    From the press release:
    Monday, January 10th, The American Numismatic Society
    Exhibit, Drachmas, Doubloons and Dollars re-opens to the
    public at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 33 Liberty
    Street, New York City. In August 2004, the exhibit was
    temporarily closed after a sudden Orange Alert from the
    Department of Homeland Security, which warned of "casing
    and surveillance activities" against major United States
    financial institutions. The ANS exhibit includes the exceedingly
    rare 1933 Double Eagle, the world's most valuable coin valued
    at $7.59 million and on long term loan to the exhibition along
    with a Brasher doubloon, a 1804 dollar, a Confederate States
    half-dollar and an ultra-high relief 20-dollar gold piece designed
    by Augustus Saint-Gaudens. More than 800 examples of the
    American Numismatic Society's noted collection of one million
    coins, bills and other forms of currency used worldwide and
    spanning 2,700 years are also on view. For further information
    ANS or The New York Times Metro Section Full Story

    Arthur Shippee also pointed out the very interesting Times article,
    which has pictures of the 1933 Double Eagle being placed on
    display. Here are some excerpts:

    "Until last week, the world's most expensive coin was hidden
    in the world's most valuable gold vault.

    That is to say, in the brilliantly lighted blue-and-white stronghold
    of E Level, the deepest sanctuary of the Federal Reserve Bank
    of New York, the city's bank of banks.

    The coin was locked in a compartment at bedrock, 80 feet
    below Liberty Street in Lower Manhattan, surrounded by $90
    billion worth of gold bars - some 550,000 of them - from 60
    foreign institutions. That is more gold than at Fort Knox, and
    indeed, more than in any other repository."

    "For the double eagle's return from the underworld, The New
    York Times was granted rare permission to enter the vault on
    a recent morning as the coin was transferred, after agreeing
    not to describe the bank's security arrangements or print the
    names of its subterranean guardians.

    Among those present were: three federal officers with
    automatic weapons. The archivist of the bank. A senior vice
    president of the bank. The head of the American Numismatic
    Society. The coin owner's representative. The coin's historian.
    A vault keeper. An auditor. A custodian. And yes, the two
    carpenters who actually did the work.

    This, then, was the retinue monitoring the transport of the
    double eagle, a 34-millimeter-wide, 0.96-ounce stamped
    disk that is 90 percent gold and 10 percent copper. The
    length of the journey was but five floors: from the vault to
    the street-level exhibition space."

    [I'm glad to see the exhibition has been remounted. I had
    the pleasure of viewing it last year. By all means, be sure
    to see it when visiting New York. -Editor]

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-01-16
Volume
  • 8

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