Heritage Auctions, USA-Long Beach (CA)

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13-06-2018 – 14-06-2018

Long Beach Expo Auctions

Private Collection Paces Heritage’s Long Beach Auctions to $18.1 Million

Elite private collections of the finest U.S. coins known to exist powered Heritage Auctions’ Long Beach Expo events to $18.1 million June 14-17 in Long Beach, California. An Important New York Collection sold for a combined $6.7 million, laying claim to the top 12 most expensive lots sold during the four-day event. 

1804 $1 Original PR62 PCGS Secure. Realized: $2.64 million.

The collection featured a connoisseur selection of 22 U.S. type. Its top lot was the storied Mickley-Hawn-Queller specimen of the 1804 dollar. The Class I “Original” example of the “King of American Coins” was graded PR62 by PCGS and realized $2.64 million.

1793 1C Chain, AMERICA, Periods, S-4, B-5, R.3, MS65 Brown PCGS. CAC. Realized: $990,000.

A 1793 Chain Cent, graded MS65 Brown by PCGS and pedigreed to the famed Eliasberg collection, sold for $990,000.

1776 $1 Continental Dollar, CURRENCY, Pewter, EG FECIT, MS67 NGC. Newman 3-D, W-8460, R.4. Realized: $440,000.

Additional highlights from the collection include a 1776 EG FECIT Pewter Continental dollar, MS67 NGC, which sold for $444,000, and a 1796 No Stars quarter eagle, BD-2, MS61 PCGS, which garnered 14 bids to end at $396,000. An 1804 Draped Bust quarter, Browning-1, MS65 NGC. CAC and a breathtaking 1870 Liberty Head twenty dollar, PR65 Ultra Cameo NGC. CAC each realized $336,000.

The Long Beach Expo made history when the one-of-a-kind gold coin believed to have once been a cherished memento of U.S. President George Washington made its first public pre-auction showing since 1890 when Heritage put it on display June 14. In both 1875 and 1890, the only years in which it went to public auction, the gold coin was described as likely struck for Washington and carried by him. In 1933, “Col.” E.H.R. Green, son of the “Witch of Wall Street,” Hetty Green, purchased it privately for more than $2,500, a huge sum in his day. Eric P. Newman acquired the coin in 1942, and it has not changed hands since.

In addition to Los Angeles, the 1792 Washington President gold eagle coin will also be displayed in New York and Chicago, and finally in Philadelphia, where it will be auctioned August 16 by Heritage Auctions during the American Numismatic Association’s annual World’s Fair of Money Convention; 100 percent of the net proceeds will benefit charitable causes.

A group of 18 Native American portrait galvanos, considered among artist Edward Warren Sawyer’s finest artistic and historic contributions to medallic art, sold for a combined $64,560. Highlights from the group include a 1904 portrait of Est-Zan-Lopa, a young Navajo girl whom Sawyer described as “a little girl blanket weaver” and a 1912 depiction of Ech-Spa-Di-E-Ash, a medicine man of the Crow Tribe. Each bronze galvano sold for $7,800 each. 

Additional highlights from the week include: 

  • A 1910 nickel, graded PR68 Deep Cameo by PCGS, hammered for $84,000. It is the only coin in the entire series to have been awarded such a grade by PCGS.

1909 $5 PR68 NGC. Realized: $168,000.

  •  Setting a house record and tied for finest ever certified, a 1909 Indian Half Eagle, graded PR68 by PCGS, sold for $168,000.
  • A beautiful 1840-C Five Dollar, MS64+ PCGS. CAC, the finest certified by the service, sold for $120,000.

You can find the online auction catalog on the Heritage Auctions website.