STACK'S FORD XVI SALE CATALOG REVIEW Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 39, September 24, 2006, Article 7

    STACK'S FORD XVI SALE CATALOG REVIEW

    The catalog for the next in the series of Ford sales has already
    been issued. Sale XVI features the first part of Ford's collection
    of Indian Peace medals. The formal title of the sale, scheduled for
    October 17, 2006 in New York, is "Medals Struck for Presentation to
    First Peoples by Spain, France, Great Britain and the United States
    of America 1680-1890." The second part, scheduled for sale in May,
    2007, will include duplicates of the U.S. series in silver and the
    bronzed copper medals.

    The centerpiece of this first sale is Ford's collection of silver
    Indian Peace medals struck by the U.S. government: "There has never
    been a collection of United States Indian Peace Medals struck in
    silver as large, comprehensive, significant or ground-breaking as
    this one.

    The one hundred and more medals that will cross the block in this
    and the second sale represent a very significant percentage of the
    total number of such medals that has ever been available for purchase
    by private and institutional collectors. In some cases, such as
    Harrison's round medals, the number present here is nearly half of
    the total number believed struck at the time they were ordered from
    the Mint!" (p62).

    John Adams writes: "I had the great good fortune of learning from
    John Ford for 25 years. We shared an interest in the early Indian
    peace medals and helped each other to build our collections.

    As the catalogue for Ford XVI shows, John did not hesitate to buy
    duplicates. He did this not out of greed but, rather, out of a
    reverence for the material that appeared to be greatly underappreciated.
    His accumulation of the large undated medals of George III makes my
    point more eloquently than my words. These medals are among the very
    few objects of any sort that one can buy and be assured of sharing
    stewardship with a native American owner. Here is a feast in which
    collectors should revel.

    The only weak points in John's collection are medals issued by the
    French and the Spanish. These medals are exceptionally rare, to be
    sure, but he did have chances to own them. I do remember a Spanish
    peace medal in a Bosco sale that was brilliantly catalogued by Paul.
    It was "good", in my opinion, but, lacking easy access to comparables,
    John convinced himself that the piece was "Mickey Mouse" and did not
    pursue it aggressively. So also on other occasions. These small holes
    in the collection are overwhelmed by John's accomplishments in the
    U.S. and English sections - we never have and never will again see
    the like."

    Cataloguer Mike Hodder writes in a one-page appreciation of Ford,
    "Indian Peace Medals were Mr. Ford's most favorite collectible. He
    lavished more study and spent more money on them than anything else
    he collected. If there was one numismatic project he wanted to start
    more than any other it was an in-depth study of the American medals
    in this series."

    "We worked well together, ferreting out information about coins and
    medals or tokens that added to their interest and value. He could
    talk about Tom Elder and Henry Chapman as if he had been brought up
    at their feet. His library was unexcelled and he never begrudged
    sharing the information he found in it. He was proud of his collections
    and very aware of their importance."

    "For almost all his career Mr. Ford was a step ahead of the rest.
    He always seemed to already have a mature collection of a numismatic
    area that everyone else was only just beginning to think about...
    His knowledge seemed to be uncanny and his memory for detail unnerving."

    The catalogue is issued with an Estimated Values insert sheet. I
    believe this is the first time Stack's has published pre-sale estimates
    and it's a great idea for the highly esoteric series. Estimates range
    from as low as $50 (for a related Jeton) to $125,000 (for a large size
    1801 Thomas Jefferson Indian Peace medal). Are the estimates too
    conservative? Time will tell. The sale has only 189 total lots, one
    medal per lot, which is the smallest Ford auction offered by Stack's
    in the past three years. I wonder how the prices realized will stack
    up to the prior fifteen Ford auctions on a per-lot basis?

    Every lot is pictured in color. Included are several photos and
    portraits of Indian awardees wearing their medals. In addition to
    Hodder's excellent description and commentary of each lot, the
    catalog includes reprints of a 1982 Coin World interview with Ford
    on the Betts-Astor Peace Medal, and a 2001 Coin World article by
    George Fuld titled "Where Are All the Indian Peace Medals?"

    I noticed one error in the catalogue - the obverse of one of the
    most important and valuable medals in the sale is not pictured -
    the lot 107 plate shows the same obverse as lot 109. The obverse
    of lot 107 (the large size silver shell 1801 Thomas Jefferson Indian
    Peace medal) is not pictured - oops!

    Although it is not an identical shot of the obverse of lot 109
    (the suspension loop is in a different position), the discoloration
    on some lettering and the "dot" below the letter D in President are
    tell-tale diagnostics. The reverse photos are different, though -
    look at the length of the extended index finger and positioning of
    the thumb. It would be helpful if Stack's were to insert a plate
    of the missing medal obverse in the post-sale hardbound catalogs;
    it would be a shame for the omission to go unaddressed.

    It will come as no surprise that the latest of the Ford sale catalogs,
    like most (if not all) that have come before it is destined to be a
    classic reference. The breadth and depth of Ford's numismatic holdings
    are absolutely stunning. Bibliophiles who haven't been assembling a
    set of these sales should be ashamed of themselves. I've purchased
    every one in hardcover for my library; this set will be a cornerstone
    of American numismatic libraries for decades to come.

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2006-09-24
Volumen
  • 9

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Autor NNP