LOT #801 |
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1795 $1 Flowing Hair, Two Leaves, B-3, BB-11, R.5 AU50 NGC. CAC....
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Sold on May 28, 2008 for:
$37,375.00
Bid Source: Live: Floor bidder
Description
Silver-Plugged 1795 Flowing Hair, Two Leaves Dollar
B-3, BB-11, R.5, AU50
1795 $1 Flowing Hair, Two Leaves, B-3, BB-11, R.5 AU50 NGC.
CAC. Silver Plugged. The Mint produced only copper cents and
half cents in 1793, due to the onerous requirement that Chief
Coiner Henry Voigt and Assayer Albion Cox each post a $10,000
surety bond before accepting gold or silver deposits for coining.
It was 1794 before Congress lowered those enormous sums to $5,000
for Voigt and $1,000 for Cox, and the Mint commenced striking
silver half dollars and dollars. But the presses were inadequate
for silver dollars: Of 2,000 pieces produced on October 15, only
1,758 were released--many of them below par.Director David Rittenhouse left office in June 1795, succeeded by William Henry DeSaussure, whose chief tasks were to begin gold coin production and improve silver coinage designs. In May 1795 the Mint finally obtained a press with sufficient pressure to make silver dollars, and coinage resumed. The first 1795 silver dollars were of the Flowing Hair design, ceding later in the year to the Draped Bust, Small Eagle design, purportedly the delight of DeSaussure. The silver-plugged dollars (three or four similar half dollars exist, as well as a single 1794 dollar) were created in 1795, and at least five different Bowers-Borckardt varieties are known.
A thin silver sliver was added to the blank planchet to increase the weight by punching a hole in the planchet and inserting the sliver, which extended slightly past the planchet surface. At striking, the dies pressed the sliver down and out across the surface, imparting the design at the same time. If all of these early changes in procedure, equipment, and design indicate an approach in the early Mint that was somewhat "seat-of-their-pants," well ... it was. "If this doesn't work, we'll try something different" was very much the rule of thumb.
Many numismatists believe the present B-3, BB-11 Two Leaves variety is the first die marriage for the year. On the obverse the third curl from the top turns down and touches the fourth curl. On the reverse there are eight berries under each wing, the only such variety. Bowers and Borckardt note that "between 50 and 75 BB-11 dollars exist, making this one of the more elusive issues of the Flowing Hair type." This piece boasts wonderful luster remaining on the even, dove-gray surfaces that show lighter pearl-gray around the devices. The silver plug is quite evident, as a darker area of coppery patina through the center. A few old abrasions and a small rim nick are noted on the reverse at 12:30.
Coin Index Numbers: (NGC ID# 24WZ, Variety PCGS# 39990, Base PCGS# 6854, GSID# 199075)
Metal: 89.24% Silver, 10.76% Copper
Weight: 26.96 grams
ASW: 0.77352oz
Auction Info
2008 May Long Beach, CA Signature Auction #1108 (go to Auction Home page)
Auction Dates
May-Jun, 2008
28th-2nd
Wednesday-Monday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 12
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 2,819
Buyer's Premium per Lot:
15% of the successful bid per lot.
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