![]() Her big brother is struggling to keep up! She’s always checking quarters to see if they’re “special ones” and gets so excited when she discovers one she still needs for her collection. She LOVES matching the pictures from the quarters she finds onto her board and then taping them into place. However, it’s my 5 year old daughter who has really caught the collecting bug. Since he spent the past year learning United States geography, I thought it would be a fun and educational summer activity for him. It was the Red Book decades before there was a Red Book, and humble though it was, opened the door to literally millions of guide books to follow.I made this United States quarter collection board so my 7 year old could collect the coins from all 50 states. The Coin Collector’s Manual was published in a small edition, and is today quite rare. The top federal coin on the list (coming in 12th place) is the 1823/2 Capped Bust quarter dollar, at $25! Leading the parade is “Experimental Cent of 1792” (Birch or Silver Center not specified), at $66.50. Most surprising is Jones’ list of highest-priced coins sold in 1859 to 1860. Jones calls the 1793 chain cent a “link ” he lists a 1795 “Curious head” cent and Jones calls the 1856 flying eagle cent a “buzzard.” Grading adjectives such as “splendid,” “fair,” and “poor” have - mercifully - disappeared during the intervening 155 years. This can be accounted for in no other way, than that one coin collector or dealer may call a coin fine or very fine, when another would describe one exactly like it, only as good or fine.”Īnother of Jones’ observations also reinforces the constancy of some numismatic maxims: “Coins in poor condition, unless decidedly rare, are receiving but little notice, while those which are good impressions, find liberal purchasers immediately.”īut some things do change, including numismatic nomenclature. In explanation of such anomalies - proving that some things never change - Jones writes: “There are some apparent discrepancies where the condition of the coin sold, is represented as the same, the prices are widely different. ![]() A 1799 Draped Bust cent in Fine condition, for example, had gone for $8 at the Levick Sale in 1859, but another only in Good went for $10 at Cogan’s sale just a year later. These coins tended to be in varying conditions, which led to some curious comparisons. So, for each listed piece - say, a 1796 Draped Bust dollar - there were up to five values provided from auction sales. For these events (all except Sage’s and Bangs’ held in Philadelphia), Jones recorded the coin’s price realized, and its condition. Sage’s and Bangs, Merwin’s auctions in 1859 and Cogan’s sale of May 1860. Levick’s collection in December 1859 Augustus B. ![]() Kline’s collection in June 1855 Edward Cogan’s sale of his large cents in November 1858 Cogan’s auction of J.N.T. Jones, with The Coin Collector’s Manual, which he stated was “Designed as a guide book for coin collectors.” How could Jones determine a coin’s value in the small market of 1860? He resourcefully discovered five guides from the recent past: the auction of John W. The hobby grew exponentially during the 1850s, but new collectors were flying blind: there were no reference books, no numismatic newspapers, no coin clubs, and few part-time dealers.Įnter the ingenious George F. There were few “coin cranks” at first, but their numbers steadily increased. Jones invented the retail price guide for American coins that Whitman would, decades later, reprise for its Guide Book.Ĭoin collecting in America is older than the nation: numismatists were prowling the colonies by the 1750s. The correct answer is “1860.” In that last antebellum year, George F. A quiz: When was the first guide book of United States coins published? Most will answer “1947,” the cover date of the Red Book’s first edition.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |