Stack’s Bowers Galleries conducted its official auction of the Whitman Coin and Collectibles Baltimore Expo November 15 to 19, 2011. The impressive sale presented 8,858 lots and realized a total of $15.6 million. U.S. coin, currency and exonumia offerings totaled 6,030 lots and realized $13.2 million. An additional 2,828 ancient and foreign coin and paper currency lots garnered $2.4 million in prices realized.
Significant highlights featured in the United States coin sessions included selections from the Teich Family Collection, the Brandywine Collection, the MHS Collection, and the M.B. Tucker Collection of U.S. Gold Coins. Among U.S. currency offerings, type notes performed particularly well, the market for such pieces definitely trending upward as prices realized were stronger in this venue than in other recent Stack’s Bowers Galleries paper money sales.
“Our November Baltimore Auction capped an extremely successful and highly important year for Stack’s Bowers Galleries,” commented Chris Napolitano, president of the firm. “We launched Stack’s Bowers Galleries in January of 2011, and within a single year we have established the combined firm as a dominant force in the numismatic auction market. The strengths and talents of our staff, the enthusiastic support and participation of our consignors and bidders, the strength of the market, and the dynamic Whitman Coin and Collectibles Expo proved to be a particularly powerful combination in our November Baltimore Auction. Competition was strong in all areas, with collectors, dealers and investors worldwide participating through live and Internet bidding to deliver some truly impressive results.”
The Teich Family Collection, a museum-quality collection of classic United States proof coins from 1854 to the mid-19th century, was assembled during the 1950s and 1960s, primarily through bidding and buying in most of the Stack’s auctions of that era. Part I of the Teich Family holdings served as an anchor consignment to the Stack’s Bowers Galleries November Baltimore Auction. Highlights from this portion of the collection include lot 5288, a rare and significant Chapman proof 1921 Morgan silver dollar certified Proof-64 by PCGS that shattered pre-auction estimates when it brought $100,625. The coin had originally been acquired from Henry Chapman himself in 1923 (by an owner prior to the Teich family).
Other impressive prices were garnered by lot 1031, the 1792 half disme in PCGS/CAC VF-25 from the MHS Collection that traded hands for $109,250, lot 9449, the 1804 Capped Bust Right half eagle in PCGS/CAC MS-63 from the Brandywine Collection that sold for $69,000, and lot 6194, an intriguing pair of die trials for the 1920 Pilgrim Tercentenary commemorative half dollar in PCGS MS-61 that realized $31,625. The die trials are pedigreed to the great-grandson of Cyrus E. Dallin, designer of the Pilgrim Tercentenary commemorative half dollar.
U.S. coin and currency highlights from the Stack’s Bowers Galleries November 2011 Baltimore Auction include:
For a complete list of prices realized in the Stack’s Bowers Galleries November 2011 Baltimore Auction, visit www.stacksbowers.com or call at 800.458.4646. We are currently accepting consignments for the Official Auction of the March 2012 Whitman Coin and Collectibles Expo in Baltimore.