Prestwick Collection of Carson City Rarities Among Top Draws in Heritage Auctions’ U.S. Coins Event
When the hammer falls for the final time in Heritage Auctions’ US Coins Signature® Auction November 11-14, a number of seldom-seen rarities, many from long-held private collections, will have found new homes.
DALLAS, Texas – When the hammer falls for the final time in Heritage Auctions’ US Coins Signature® Auction November 11-14, a number of seldom-seen rarities, many from long-held private collections, will have found new homes.
“We are very excited to offer such a wonderful array of scarce and rare pieces from passionate collectors,” Heritage Auctions Senior Vice President Sarah Miller said. “From Carson Cities to early US type to patterns, there is truly something for everyone in the November Auction.”
Prestwick Collection
The Prestwick Collection of Carson City coins reflects the owner’s
appreciation of both Scotland’s Prestwick Golf Club, with its legendary
place in the annals of golf, and the legacy of Carson City coinage within
the numismatic field. Viewed by many as the “true home” of the British
open, the venue served as host to the first 12 Opens, starting in 1860, as
well as another 12 Opens over ensuing years. The Carson City Mint’s coinage
spanned much of the same era and was a microcosm of the Old West numismatic
times until it, too, was succeeded by other venues.
The Prestwick Collection includes 61 lots of Carson City coins, including several classic Western rarities in particularly high grades. The consignor of these coins has played several times at Prestwick and has greatly enjoyed his time collecting distinguished coins from the legendary Nevada Mint, including but not limited to:
- An 1870-CC $20 AU53 PCGS. Variety 1-A
- An 1873-CC 50C Arrows, Open 3, Large CC, WB-103, Die Pair 6, R.4, MS63 PCGS
- An 1878-CC $5 AU58 PCGS. Variety 1-A
- An 1875-CC $10 MS60 NGC. Variety 2-B
- An 1874-CC 10C Arrows, F-101, R.4, MS63 PCGS
- An 1873-CC 10C Arrows, F-101, R.4, MS65 NGC
- An 1889-CC $1 MS61 PCGS
Pacific Rim Collection
The Pacific Rim Collection is made up entirely of impressive U.S. patterns,
31 of which will be offered in the Premier Session, with 16 more in the
afternoon floor session.
Among the extraordinary patterns in the collection are an 1870 Indian Princess dollar struck in silver , which joins an 1879 Morgan dollar in copper and an 1880 Goloid Metric dollar among highlights among Premier Session Patterns.
An 1872 Trade dollar struck in silver also is among the highlights in the 280-lot high-value evening session. Other highlights in the session include, but are not limited to:
- An 1873-CC 10C Arrows, F-101, R.4, MS65 NGC
- An 1851 $50 RE Humbert Fifty Dollar, Reeded Edge, 880 Thous., AU58 PCGS. CAC. K-5, Low R.5
- A 1915-S $50 Panama-Pacific 50 Dollar Round MS64+ NGC
- A 1799 $10 Large Obverse Stars, BD-10, R.3, MS64 NGC
Charles Link Collection
The auction will feature a selection of early type coins from Charles Link,
a longtime Heritage Auctions client with an exceptional eye for quality and
scarce varieties; among his specialties are Flowing Hair, Draped Bust and
Capped Bust halves. Overton specialists will want to investigate several
outstanding half dollars, including an exceptional
1809 O-107 half dollar certified MS65 PCGS
, which tops the Condition Census for the variety and dazzles the eye with
its fantastic Gem surface quality. The coin is essentially prooflike
beneath a speckling of original reddish-tan toning. A handful of other
denominations offer equally impressive selections from this high-quality
collection.
Other highlights from the Charles Link Collection include, but are not limited to:
- An 1804 10C 13 Stars Reverse, JR-1, R.5, AU53 PCGS
- An 1817 1C 13 Stars, N-11, R.1, MS65 Brown PCGS. CAC
- An 1837 50C GR-23, R.2, MS65+ PCGS. CAC
N.E. Lincoln Collection
This collection’s origin was the in the curiosity of the consignor, who
discovered coins in his pocket that he found fascinating when he was in his
early teens. That initial interest blossomed when he discovered a local
coin shop, where he found mesmerizing copper pieces. As his interest grew,
he zeroed in on scarcer certified coins. He then decided to widen the scope
of his collection when he concluded it made sense to own a wider selection
of American coins rather than simply a few top rarities. He collected by
denomination, type and mint to reflect different periods in American
history; in so doing, he assembled a trove that now includes key issues,
rare varieties, patterns and better-date copper, silver and gold.
Selections from the N.E. Lincoln Collection can be found in the regular
Floor Session and the online Internet Signature® Session of this auction;
highlights from the collection include, but are not limited to:
- A 1903-S $1 MS64 PCGS. CAC
- An 1867-S $10 VF25 PCGS. CAC
- A 1921 50C MS64 PCGS
- An 1855-S $10 XF45 PCGS
For images and information on all 1,147 lots in the auction, visit
HA.com/1336
.
Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world’s largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Geneva, Amsterdam and Hong Kong.
Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet’s most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1.5 million registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of five million past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit.
For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases .
Download the Greysheet app for access to pricing, news, events and your subscriptions.
Subscribe Now.
Subscribe to The Greysheet for the industry's most respected pricing and to read more articles just like this.
Source: Heritage Auctions
Please sign in or register to leave a comment.
Your identity will be restricted to first name/last initial, or a user ID you create.
Comment
Comments