"TRIBUTE EDITION" REPRINT OF FIRST REDBOOK Public Deposited

BOOK REVIEW

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 53, December 31, 2006, Article 6

    BOOK REVIEW: "TRIBUTE EDITION" REPRINT OF FIRST REDBOOK

    The 1947 first edition of R.S. Yeoman's Guide Book of United States
    Coins has been reprinted by Whitman Publishing. We've discussed it
    quite a bit in earlier E-Sylum issues (see links below). I was pleased
    to receive a copy from my wife for Christmas this week. As described
    for us by publisher Dennis Tucker, the book's dust jacket is an image
    of a lightly (but obviously) used copy of an original 1947 edition.
    A "1st edition commemorative reissue RED BOOK!" label cleverly covers
    the 1947 date on the spine of the dust jacket, but the book cover itself
    is indeed a fairly faithful 100% reproduction of the original. There
    are subtle differences that a trained die-variety collector would pick
    up on as key diagnostics to differentiate the reissue from the original.
    On my copy, one telltale sign are several filled letters in the gilt
    printing of author R. S. Yeoman's name.

    The main difference, of course, is the 32-page full-color section of
    new material at the back of the book. Six of those pages are ads,
    another feature not found in the original. The 1947 edition listed
    valuations for about 3,400 different coins, tokens, sets and other
    items. The 2007 edition covers more than 6,000 items.

    The introduction section reviews the history of the book, and notes
    that mintage figures were originally in a section at the end, rather
    than beside each individual listing. There are pros and cons to this
    arrangement. Concise, tabular mintage tables can be more convenient
    depending on the question the reader is trying to answer. Perhaps
    these could be reinstituted as a special feature of the deluxe version
    of future editions.

    The remaining sections are organized as the Red Book is - Pre-Federal
    coins and tokens, Copper and Nickel coins, Silver, Gold and others.
    Each section discusses the differences between 1947 and today: in the
    book itself, in the hobby, and in valuations. Tables at the front of
    each section list the total number of pieces cataloged in the 1947 and
    2007 editions, and show price differences for selected coins. For
    example, a Fine 1722 Rosa Americana halfpenny listed for $5.00 in 1947
    but is $2,500 today. The final section, 'The Red Book: Yesterday and
    Today' walks the reader through the changes in the hobby decade by decade
    up to the issuance of the 2006 Benjamin Franklin silver dollars.

    One other nice feature I'd like to mention are the drawings by Chuck
    Daughtrey of editors R.S. Yeoman and Ken Bressett on the back dust
    jacket flap. All in all, a nice addition for the libraries of
    bibliophiles and ordinary collectors alike. I've actually bought and
    sold several copies of the 1st edition Red Book over the years, but
    didn't save a copy for myself. I do have two nice high-condition
    examples of the 3rd and 5th editions that I just couldn't part with -
    these are not as valuable as the 1st edition, but more rare. There
    can only ever be one "first", and the new Tribute Edition is a fine
    way to honor the inaugural 1947 edition of Dick Yeo's gift to numismatics.

    "TRIBUTE EDITION" REPRINT OF FIRST REDBOOK PUBLISHED
    esylum_v09n45a04.html

    THOUGHTS ON THE FIRST EDITION RED BOOK
    esylum_v09n46a05.html

    MORE ON THE FIRST EDITION RED BOOK REPRINT
    esylum_v09n47a07.html

Source URL Date published
  • 2006-12-31
Volume
  • 9

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