DICK JOHNSON ON COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY'S LOUBAT MEDAL Público Deposited

Contenido del artículo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 9, March 2, 2008, Article 13

    DICK JOHNSON ON COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY'S LOUBAT MEDAL

    Dick Johnson writes: "The Loubat Medal was indeed administered
    by Columbia University. Columbia administered so many awards
    they became very sophisticated in medal award programs. To
    name a few: The Pulitzer Medal, of course, (separate medals
    for journalism, letters, music), the Barnard Medal (physical)
    or astronomy sciences), Butler Medal (philosophy or education,
    Maria Cabot Medal (journalism), Charles Frederick Chandler
    Medal (chemistry), James Furman Kemp Medal (geology), Ambrose
    Monell Medal (mineral technology), Columbia University Medal
    (public service -- Columbia employees exempt!), the Vetlesen
    Medal (earth science) and the little known K.C. Li Medal (for
    new applications of tungsten).

    "Columbia University was such an important client of Medallic
    Art Company (when I first worked there in New York City and
    before the distraction of the American bicentennial) that the
    firm's vice president himself called on the Columbia Awards
    Office. The firm made most of their medallic awards. Even
    when the plant moved to Danbury Connecticut the vice president
    maintained an office in New York City just to serve such
    clients as Columbia.

    "Early on when I was researching medal prospects I discovered
    the somewhat dormant Loubat Medal and asked the VP about it.
    As best as I recall, the dormancy was due to a lack of
    recommendations for the award.

    "The most recent awards of the Loubat medal I could find
    were for James Randall's book 'Lincoln the President--Midstream'
    published 1952 and Milford Mathews' book 'A Dictionary of
    Americanisms' 1951.

    "The medal bore a portrait of Joseph Florimond duc de Loubat
    and was struck in France. It was created in 1910 by medallist
    Frederic Charles Victor de Vernon. Incidentally, Joseph Levine
    sold one in his 66th auction sale (November 13, 1999, lot 1398)
    where someone got a terrific bargain for $27 plus 10 percent
    buyer's fee."

    [The award is "in recognition of the best works printed in
    the English language on the history, geography, archaeology,
    ethnology, philology, or numismatics of North America."
    Numismatics is the reason for our interest in the award.
    Perhaps the Numismatic Bibliomania Society (NBS), Numismatic
    Literary Guild (NLG), American Numismatic Association (ANA)
    or American Numismatic Society (ANS) will consider nominating
    a work on North American numismatics for a future Loubat
    prize. -Editor]

    ON COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY'S LOUBAT PRIZE
    esylum_v11n08a09.html

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2008-03-02
Volumen
  • 11

Relaciones

Autor NNP