SAINT-GAUDENS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE HOPES MINT PRODUCT FUELS INTEREST Público Deposited

Contenido del artículo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 12, March 23, 2008, Article 17

    SAINT-GAUDENS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE HOPES MINT PRODUCT FUELS INTEREST

    [The Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle design is getting another
    workout. The Union Leader of Cornish, NH published an
    article interviewing Henry Duffy, curator at the Saint-Gaudens
    National Historic Site, about the new version of the artists'
    coin design being prepared by the U.S. Mint. -Editor]

    The United States Mint has announced it will recreate a $20
    gold coin designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens in 1907, and a
    curator hopes the new version of the coin will attract more
    visitors to the famed American sculptor's former estate in
    Cornish.

    Considered by many to be the most beautiful coin ever made
    in the United States, the high-relief Liberty Gold Piece,
    also known as the Double Eagle, bear the image of a woman
    holding a branch and a torch on one side.

    "Liberty's torch represents knowledge, and the branch
    represents victory," said Henry Duffy, curator at the Saint-
    Gaudens National Historic Site on Route 12A in Cornish. "Of
    course, the knowledge she's spreading is democracy. She's
    spreading democracy to the world." The back of the coin
    features an eagle flying under the sun. On the re-issued
    coin, the inscription "In God We Trust" will appear above
    the sun, as it did on a 1908 version of the same coin.

    The design will be featured on a collectible 24-karat
    coin intended for sale to the public in 2009. Duffy said
    the mint originally planned to release the coin in 2007,
    its 100th anniversary, but original molds had been
    destroyed, which delayed the process.

    Duffy said visitors to the historic site often ask how
    they can acquire one of Saint-Gaudens' coins.

    "They're usually disappointed when they found out how much
    they are," he said. "This will be helpful to us to be able
    to recommend this to people, so I'm sure people are going
    to like that." Duffy said he thinks the new coins will be
    a hit among seasoned and new coin collectors and may even
    draw more visitors to the historic site in Cornish.

    "There's a lot of interesting intrigue and mystery around
    these coins right now," he said.

    To read the complete article, see:
    Full Story

    [Numismatic News commented on the planned pieforts, basically
    a revival of the ultra-high-relief Saint-Gaudens $20 design.
    I've never been a fan of dusting off old designs for new coins,
    but in this case it sounds like a winning concept, assuming
    the Mint indeed remains faithful to the artist's original
    conception. -Editor]

    The dream of President Theodore Roosevelt and artist Augustus
    Saint-Gaudens to restore the artistry of ancient Greece to
    American coinage may be realized in 2009 when the Mint plans
    to strike ultra-high-relief Saint-Gaudens $20 gold pieces for
    collectors.

    Now without the constraints of commerce, the Mint will attempt
    a 27mm coin with a thick planchet... The French have a term
    for a double thickness planchet. It is called piefort and
    collectors in Europe and elsewhere find coins struck on these
    planchets appealing.

    The new pieces will be 24 karat, or .999 fine, eliminating
    some of the hardness of a gold coin, which in 1907 was struck
    with a .900 fine gold alloyed with copper. They will also
    contain an even troy ounce of gold, making them conform to
    the demands of 21st century collectors and bullion coin buyers.

    To read the complete article, see:
    Full Story

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2008-03-23
Volumen
  • 11

Relaciones

Autor NNP