THE STACK'S JOHN J. FORD CATALOGUES Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 43, October 9, 2005, Article 13

    THE STACK'S JOHN J. FORD CATALOGUES

    Tom DeLorey writes: "The Stack's John J. Ford Catalogue
    Part XII is, indeed, incredible! Congratulations, once again,
    to the Stack's and their excellent cataloguers.

    Was I the only one bemused by the fact that this catalogue,
    featuring Massachusetts silver, should happen to be numbered
    XII in the series? That is, after all, how the denomination is
    expressed on the Shillings. No doubt this is nothing more than
    a remarkable coincidence?

    If not, can we perhaps expect the long-awaited and (some say)
    ill-starred Western Assay Bar collection to appear as
    Catalogue # XIII???"

    [I did notice the XII numbering and wondered if it was
    intentional. Definitely amusing either way.

    I'm probably not the only one wondering just how many sales
    there will be before the Ford collection is completely dispersed.
    I asked someone at Stack's when I called about the hardbound
    set I've been assembling, and was told (and I'm paraphrasing
    here) "we're not sure - they keep finding more stuff."

    Certainly the Assay Bars and the famed Nova Constellatio
    silver pattern set have yet to cross the block. What else is
    in the wings? -Editor]

    David Gladfelter writes: "The entire series (12 thus far) of
    Ford collection catalogs produced by Stack's, not only the
    latest catalog of Ford's Massachusetts silver, deserves to
    be cited as setting a new standard in numismatic cataloguing.
    The thoroughness of the research (including pedigree, just
    now beginning to receive anything like serious appreciation
    in cataloguing), the quality of the photographs, the liberal use
    of historical background information, the design and layout,
    the written descriptions including contributions by guest
    catalogers and essay writers such as George Fuld, Bruce
    Hagen, Scott Rubin and Michael Hodder, in addition to
    Stack's in-house staff, all make for a world class presentation
    of what some would call the finest U. S. numismatic collection
    of all time (despite the comment I heard that Ford didn't have
    any national bank notes).

    Stacks's had to be coaxed into producing special hardbound
    library editions of these catalogs, and The E-Sylum took the
    lead in convincing Stack's that there would be a market for such
    hardbounds. Stack's responded with sturdily-bound special
    editions (signature-sewn, not side-sewn or perfect-bound)
    in sufficient quantities that anyone who wants them can order
    them. And guess what? They're even pretty to look at, with
    lettered and blind-stamped matching front covers and marbled-style
    endpapers. So whether your Ford bids are successful or not,
    you have great information on the coins, tokens, medals and
    paper of interest to you. These standards are being maintained
    in Stack's regular auction catalogs.

    I think John Ford would have been pleased that advances in
    numismatic cataloguing didn't stop with his work on New
    Netherlands's 60th sale (in John Adams's opinion, the best
    catalog to date when he published United States Numismatic
    Literature, Volume II)."

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-10-09
Volume
  • 8

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