DISPOSITION OF THE HARRY X BOOSEL COLLECTION OF 1873 COINAGE Pubblico Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 33, August 13, 2006, Article 20

    DISPOSITION OF THE HARRY X BOOSEL COLLECTION OF 1873 COINAGE

    Tom DeLorey writes: "Harry's coins were sold at auction long before
    he died. I advised Tillie as to what of his exonumia to consign to
    Joe Levine for auction, and purchased the rest outright. I still have
    some of it in my exonumia box."

    Bill Burd writes: "Harry's work on the 1873 coinage was published in
    a series of articles in the Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine from March
    1957 through December 1958. In 1960 he published a revised limited
    edition of 500 copies in a booklet form titled "1873-1873". I have
    number 500 with a special hardbound cover and autographed.

    In 1972 Harry sold much of his collection in auction. Roy Harte had
    an interest in 1873 and purchased many of the coins. In November 1977
    Harte sold many of his 1873 dated foreign coins in a Bowers & Ruddy
    Auction and Harry purchased many of them. His paddle number at the
    auction was "73". (I have it in my library along with his notated
    catalog).

    Harte had another auction in 1983 and Harry purchased the Morgan &
    Orr Medal and donated it the ANA. They were the manufacturer of the
    San Francisco coin press that was on display at the ANA at the time.
    I also have Harry's Florida license plate. It is "HXB-1873"."

    Karl Moulton writes: "Harry X Boosel's entire collection was sold in
    the April 28, 1972 Central States sale by Rarcoa. The U.S. coins were
    sold in lots 577-778; The foreign portion goes all the way to Lot 964.
    There's even a short bio and picture on the inside cover." Mark
    Borckardt and Julian Leidman also knew of this sale.

    Fred Reed writes: "My numismatic date database of nearly 15,000
    significant numismatic events that I use to write my weekly Coin
    World column "The Week That Was" has these references to Harry:

    Aug. 17, 1912: Mr. 1873 collector Harry X Boosel born
    May 1 1937: Numismatic Scrapbook correspondent Harry X Boosel
    reports 69 commem coin bills pending
    Sept. 18 1968: Lester Merkin sells Harry X Boosel's
    first "1873" collection
    Apr. 28 1972: RARCOA sells Harry X Boosel's
    second "1873" collection

    I, like Tom DeLorey, had run-ins with Harry's middle initial at
    Coin World in the 1970s. I don't have his death date, but if an
    E-Sylum reader knows it, I'd be obliged to enter that too. My
    contact point is freed3@airmail.net."

    Dave Perkins writes: "In the Lester Merkin Public Auction Sale -
    September 18, 1968 catalog, Lots 96-117 were "SELECTIONS FROM THE
    HARRY X BOOSEL SPECIALIZED 1873 COLLECTION." The introductory page
    to this sale noted "BOOSEL'S 1873 COINS" under the general sale title
    "EXTRAORDINARY UNITED STATES COINS." This was quite an auction sale
    overall, and is one of my favorite sale catalogs. The cataloger wrote
    the following which preceded Lot 96: "The following are all dated 1873.
    All remarks in quotation marks are supplied by Harry X Boosel and
    should be accorded the attention and respect they merit as coming
    from a bonafide expert. Many of these coins are of great rarity."

    Given it was termed "Selections from." I would venture to say these
    were duplicates from his collection. Only four or so of the lots
    here were plate coins from his book.

    I met "Mr. 1873" once briefly in 1983 or '84 (?) at the Central States
    Convention show in Minneapolis. John McCloskey (President of the
    Liberty Seated Collector's Club) asked me if I wanted to meet "Mr.
    1873" and of course I said sure!

    [Based on these facts, it seems to me that Dave Perkins has probably
    best summarized the disposition of Boosel's collection - duplicates
    sold in 1968 with the main collection sold in 1972. This could be
    confirmed if most of the plate coins in Boosel's book could be traced
    to the 1972 sale.

    Cataloging style and certainly the entire coin market have changed
    quite a bit in the 35 years or so since Boosel's collection was sold.
    It would be interesting to see how the collections would be presented
    for sale today, and what the total hammer price might be. -Editor]

    Roger deWardt Lane of Hollywood, Florida writes: "Back in the eighties,
    as a member of the Gold Coast Coin Club, I spent several meeting nights
    talking to Harry X Boosel. He lived in the Chicago area and was a member
    of the Chicago Coin Club. At that time Harry X and his wife spent the
    winters in Ft.Lauderdale. When in town he would visit our meetings. He
    was known as Mr. 1873.

    In 1983 the Diplomat Resort on Hollywood Beach hosted the AINA American
    Israel Numismatic Association, national convention. We had the convention
    at the hotel more than one year, but this one stands out as I set up an
    exhibit of my Modern Dime Size Silver Coins of The World. I won the
    "Best of Show" award which was a fancy clock with a AINA medal and name
    plate on it. I just checked it to see the date of the convention.

    Harry came to me, after he said he spent a lot of time looking at the
    hundreds of "world dimes" in my exhibit, and said "you do not have a
    single '1873' coin in it". He told me he would send me one when he
    got back to Chicago. This he did and I have a 1873 Russian 10 Kopec
    as part of my date collection with the provenance of Harry X Boosel.

    I talked again with Harry X at another local meeting, probably at a
    later year. If I remember correctly, he told me he had disposed of
    his collection, but had a double headed U.S. dime, not 1873 but a more
    current year silver dime, which he sold to me at this meeting as an
    odd item.

    I think members of the Chicano Coin Club could tell our readers more
    about Harry. He was a great guy and always had a story to tell."

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2006-08-13
Volume
  • 9

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Autore NNP