SO WHO'S BUYING ALL THE U.S. NUMISMATIC LITERATURE? Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 50, November 27, 2005, Article 5

    SO WHO'S BUYING ALL THE U.S. NUMISMATIC LITERATURE?

    With all the great U.S. literature sales recently, I asked
    George Kolbe, "In the bygone days of yore when Armand Champa,
    Harry Bass, Dan Hamelberg and others were building their
    libraries, the major buyers of top-end U.S. literature were
    pretty well known to all. With the first two libraries
    dispersed, and Dan already owning most everything one might
    want, who are the big buyers in today’s market? No need
    to name names of course, but I’m curious and was hoping you’d
    share your thoughts on this for The E-Sylum. What kinds of
    people are assembling the big libraries today? Or is the
    material being more widely dispersed to a lot of specialists
    who aren’t intent on building a “one of everything” U.S.
    library?"

    George replied: "The easy, and most accurate, general response
    to your various queries is: I don't know, at least with any
    certainty. But that will not satisfy, so I'll ramble on a bit.

    Harry Bass, Armand Champa, then (and now) Dan Hamelberg,
    overlapped each others' acquisitional timeframes. Other
    names could be added to this unparalleled period in the
    field of American numismatic literature. John Adams, for
    one, jumps to mind, as does the original host of the
    disease, John Ford; George Fuld and Eric Newman were also
    pioneers. Craig Smith, though largely unknown until his
    library was dispersed earlier this year, promised to carry
    on the tradition. Right now, I cannot provide the name of
    a new carrier of the flame, though there are candidates.

    Libraries are a reflection of their owners. This is trite
    but true. Harry Bass formed his library on a scale commensurate
    with the size of his state, though with keen discernment.
    He viewed his holdings as a source of information on the
    coins he loved to collect, though he was no less enamoured
    of his library and treated it as such. The raison d'être
    of Armand Champa's library is more complicated, or perhaps
    not. Books seemed to be the end, not the means. He loved
    to be the big buyer at auctions, traveled the country to
    buy libraries or single rare books, and he was a great
    popularizer. With the help of Armand and his peers, the
    numismatic book market made great forward leaps. Dan
    Hamelberg came to the endeavor as a seeker of information
    and has become a keen preserver of our heritage. Library
    buckram rules no more. Harry Bass limited himself to works
    written in English; Armand Champa had nearly all of the
    rarities but sometimes lacked more common though essential
    reference books; Dan Hamelberg's main emphasis has been on
    works concerning American coins, though titles on paper
    currency and tokens and medals have in recent years come
    under his purview. Bass left his books and catalogues as
    is. Champa often "messed" with them via "sophistication"
    (combining elements of two or more different copies of a
    work to "perfect" one) or by binding or rebinding, frequently
    to their detriment, at least in the early years. Hamelberg
    has combined the best of both approaches, often housing
    delicate items in protective book boxes, thus preserving
    them in their original state.

    What does the future hold? The market has matured in some
    respects yet much remains unknown or little understood.
    Opportunity abounds and interest in the field continues
    to expand to a new generation of bibliophiles and researchers,
    facilitated to some degree by the ubiquity of the internet.
    Will material be dispersed to specialists or will general
    libraries continue to be formed? My guess is that the day
    of the great comprehensive numismatic library is not over."

Source URL Date published
  • 2005-11-27
Volume
  • 8

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