Legendary Rarity 1927-D Double Eagle Leads Latest Bob R. Simpson Collection Offerings at Heritage's U.S. Coins Auction
August 22-28 event also features collections of James R. McGuigan, Christopher J. Salmon and Tom Bender
DALLAS, Texas (August 9, 2022) — In their classic reference, Encyclopedia of U.S. Gold Coins 1795-1933, Jeff Garrett and Ron
Guth call the 1927-D Saint-Gaudens double eagle "a legendary rarity — the
rarest regular-issue gold coin of any denomination of the 20th century."
Add to that the provenance that comes with being a part of The Bob R.
Simpson Collection, Part IX, and it immediately is clear why a
1927-D Double Eagle MS66 PCGS
will turn heads and open eyes when it crosses the block in Heritage
Auctions'
US Coins Signature® Auction August
22-28.
The rarity alone — it is one of just 13 known survivors from an original
mintage o 180,000 pieces — makes it a must-have for the most serious of
collectors.
"This is an extraordinary coin," Heritage Auctions President Greg Rohan
said. "Four are in international holdings, and two more have not been seen
in decades. There are just seven examples, including the one offered here,
that have been available to the collecting market, and of those, this is
the third-finest known. This magnificent specimen immediately will become
the centerpiece of the next collection in which it lands."
The allure of the coin is only magnified by the fact that it comes from
Simpson, whose collection has been ranked by Professional Coin Grading
Service as one of the best ever assembled.
Also from the Simpson Collection comes a
1920-S Double Eagle MS65 PCGS
, a specimen so rare that just five others carry an equal or higher grade.
The 1920-S Saint-Gaudens double eagle is one of the premier rarities of the
series in high grade, the earliest of the classic rarities among the With
Motto Saints. The 1920-S has been called the fifth-rarest collectible issue
of the 53-coin series; in high grade, only the 1921 is more elusive. There
are just three MS65-graded examples in current population data: two at PCGS
and another at NGC.
In addition to the Simpson Collection, the auction also features
exceptional collections, including the
James R. McGuigan Half Cent Collection, the
Christopher J. Salmon Collection of Massachusetts Silver
and
the Bender Family Collection, Part I.
McGuigan Collection
Many of the 235 lots in this collection have been off the market for years,
or even decades, and most — including circulation strikes, proofs, die
states and errors — rank prominently in the Condition Census for their
varieties.
Top lots in the auction from the McGuigan Collection include, but are not
limited to:
A
1796 No Pole Half Cent, B-1a, C-1, Low R.6, MS63 Brown PCGS. CAC
is one of fewer than 30 known examples, only 14 of which in all grades have
been certified by PCGS and NGC. This 1796 No Pole half cent has been
offered just three times at auction since the turn of the 20th
century.
• A
1793 Half Cent B-3, C-3, R.3, MS66 Brown PCGS. CAC EAC Grade MS65
is one of 300-400 believed to remain in existence. Just two PCGS examples
are certified MS66 Brown, with none finer than the offered example. The
PCGS Coin Facts Condition Census lists the offered specimen, an MS65 Brown
from the Pogue Collection, an MS64+ Brown from the Simpson Collection and
two MS64 Brown examples from the Pogue Collection and the Oliver Jung
Collection.
• A
1796 With Pole Half Cent B-2a, C-2, High R.4, MS64+ Red and Brown PCGS.
CAC. EAC Grade MS60
is among the finest on the Condition Census
1796 B-1a, C-1 Half Cent, MS63 Brown
Salmon Collection
The most complete collection of Massachusetts silver ever offered comes
from Salmon, who revolutionized how to collect and organize silver coins
from the Bay State. He explained the technology used to strike the early
Massachusetts coins and developed an updated classification system that
brings clarity to the series, allowing for more distinct and true
numbering. Many of the coins among the 138 lots from the collection were
previously owned by some of the icons of American numismatic collecting,
and the rarity and quality of many are elite. Highlights from the Salmon
Collection include, but are not limited to:
• Arguably the finest known example of the
(1652) New England Sixpence, Salmon 1-A, XF45 NGC
• A
(1652) New England Shilling, Salmon 2-B, XF45 NGC
that was acquired privately around 1973 from the Garrett Family Collection,
which was owned by Johns Hopkins University and maintained at Evergreen
House, and the fourth-finest in the current census
• The Garrett specimen of the
1652 Willow Tree Sixpence, Salmon 1-A, AU55 NGC
is a well-preserved example of this very rare Colonial type
Bender Family Collection Part I
One of the finest collections of U.S. coins, the
Bender Family Collection
includes the finest PCGS Registry Set of Carson City coinage, the finest
complete certified $3 Gold Proofs ever assembled, an Indian Cents Basic
Proof set that is ranked No. 2 all-time finest in the PCGS Set Registry and
a Lincoln Basic Circulation Strike set that is ranked No. 3 current finest,
and No. 5 all time. Highlights include, but are not limited to:
• An
1876-CC Half Eagle MS66 PCGS. CAC. Variety 1-A
that has been called "the nicest Carson City gold coin in existence"
• An
1876-CC Twenty Cent MS65 PCGS
is a prized 19th-century rarity that has been called the "Duke
of Carson City Coins" by Rusty Goe
• An
1871-CC Seated Liberty Quarter, one of just three Mint State survivors known for the date
• An
1870-CC Half Eagle AU58 PCGS. CAC. Variety 1-A
• An
1870-CC Ten Dollar XF45 PCGS. CAC. Variety 1-B
Images and information for all lots in the auction can be found at
HA.com/1348.
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
1,500,000 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.
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Source: Heritage Auctions