WURTZBACH MASSACHUSETTS SILVER PLATE REPRINT IN THE WORKS Öffentlichkeit Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 3, January 21, 2007, Article 5

    WURTZBACH MASSACHUSETTS SILVER PLATE REPRINT IN THE WORKS

    An exchange this week on the Yahoo Colonial Coin newsgroup concerned
    a scarce booklet on Massachusetts silver coinage. With permission
    I've complied and edited parts of the discussion for The E-Sylum.

    Roger Sibioni writes: "Back in 1937, Carl Wurtzbach, a fairly
    well-heeled collector, put together a set of photographic plates
    on Massachusetts Silver coins based on Crosby numbers. He purchased
    most of his coins from Charles E. Clapp. At the time he thought it
    to be one of the most comprehensive collections ever assembled
    (and it still is)."

    Mike Packard writes: "Carl A. Wurtzbach was a fellow Massachusetts
    resident from the western part of the state who was president of the
    Lee National Bank. He was a cousin of Virgil Brand, collected large
    cents and colonials and perhaps other series. He donated his
    Massachusetts coppers to the American Numismatic Society. He died
    in 1947 and many of his coins, including the large cents, were sold
    in the Barney Bluestone sale of 1948. Wurtzbach was president of the
    ANA from 1917 to 1919. In 1937 he published a pamphlet "Massachusetts
    Colonial Silver Money" that is available to American Numismatic
    Association members from the ANA Library."

    Dan Freidus writes: "I'd be a bit surprised if the ANA library lets
    Wurtzbach on Massachusetts silver circulate. I sold my copy back when
    I was raising money to buy my first house. But I made copies of the
    plates (4x5 negatives) and text for a reprint edition that Ken Lowe
    and I were going to publish. The project has been sitting on the
    shelf since Ken died but the sale of the Wurtzbach/Ford collection
    probably makes this a good time for me to see about printing up new
    plates and working with my binder so I can put them out."

    "It would be a deluxe edition (25 or 50 copies) with real photo
    plates (not halftones, but I haven't decided if they'd be digital
    prints or classic silver prints on real photographic paper. Which
    one I choose probably depends on pricing since with real photos, book
    would probably have to cost $250-300, while with digital prints I
    might be able to hold the cost down to $150-200. Either way, these
    would be high quality prints, text on acid-free paper, all bound in
    a handmade cloth binding."

    [The original Wurtzbach is scarce; I believe I paid over $500 for my
    copy in a long-ago Money Tree literature sale. Ken Lowe catalogued
    the Money Tree numismatic literature sales until his death, when David
    Sklow took over for a time. The U.S. numismatic literature scene just
    hasn't been the same without Ken. His enthusiasm for the topic was
    profuse and infectious. The E-Sylum came along after he was gone. If
    you think the issues are big now, imagine how much bigger they would
    be with Ken as a regular contributor! -Editor]

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  • 2007-01-21
Volumen
  • 10

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