ADAMS ACADEMY U.S. MINT MEDAL DISCOVERY Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 3, January 20, 2008, Article 13

    ADAMS ACADEMY U.S. MINT MEDAL DISCOVERY

    Coin World had a great article about the U.S. Mint Adams
    Academy medal found on eBay by anonymous collector "jonathanb",
    who happens to be an E-Sylum subscriber. Here's how he
    described his find in a post on the Collector's Universe
    forum December 19, 2007. -Editor]

    A medal for the Adams Academy is the alphabetically-first
    school medal listed by Julian as struck at the US Mint prior
    to 1892. He describes it as follows:

    SC-1
    Adams Academy
    Starting in 1876, the mint usually struck one gold
    Adams Academy medal each year for Henry Mitchell.
    The last was produced in 1892. A letter from
    Superintendent James Pollock to Mitchell, of
    September 11, 1876, mentioned that the relief was
    very bold on the obverse die. In the second quarter
    of 1889 four bronze medals were struck but not
    reported in the annual list of medals struck.

    ...and that's it. Most of the other medals described by
    Julian were actually described, with obverse and reverse
    designs and full legends, diameter, and so on. Many of
    them are pictured. This has nothing.

    The 1986 Price Guide to Julian, produced by Rich Hartzog,
    has pictures for many of the medals that were unpictured
    in the original book. There is no picture for SC-1 in the
    price guide either. For selected medals, the price guide
    also lists a count of auction appearances located by Carl
    Carlson. There are no auction records listed.

    As far as I can tell, the mint records say that some medals
    were struck, but nobody had found one even to know what they
    looked like. The paper money folks have a term for this, SENC
    (Surviving Example Not Confirmed), for cases where they know
    that a note was issued by a particular bank but where nobody
    has located a copy.

    I'm very happy (very happy! very happy!) to report that
    Julian SC-1 is now CONFIRMED!

    To read the original post at Collector's Universe, see:
    Full Story
    ), and Jonathanb adds: "It's a neat piece. There could be 15 more,
    but do they still exist? Stuff gets lost permanently over
    time, and gold stuff gets melted. I sort of expected that
    someone would pop up and say "What's the big deal? I have
    three of them!" but I haven't heard anything.

    "It's too bad that there haven't been any updates to the
    Julian reference since it was published 30 years ago. It
    seems that there's no update planned. I've been going through
    auction records for U.S. Mint medals trying to figure out
    which ones are truly rare and which ones aren't. It's difficult
    to figure out what's known and what isn't. I thought that this
    was a new discovery when I bid on it, but it could just as
    easily have turned out not to be. I was lucky in several
    different directions."

    And speaking of eBay bargains, jonathanb adds this note about
    the deluxe leatherbound copy of Dave Bowers' 'A California
    Gold Rush History' in the Stack's Americana sale that I mentioned
    last week: "Based on the timing I suspect that this copy is
    one that was snagged on eBay last year for a grand total of
    $150 (plus shipping, darn). The last copy that Stack's sold
    went for nearly $6,000, including premium. It'll be interesting
    to see what this one brings. Could be a tidy profit for the
    consigner, if I'm right."

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2008-01-20
Volume
  • 11

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