LOT #3397 |
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1927-S $20 MS66 NGC....
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Sold on Jan 10, 2008 for:
$149,500.00
Bid Source: Live: Floor bidder
Description
Vibrant 1927-S Double Eagle, MS66
An Important Condition Rarity
1927-S $20 MS66 NGC. In 1927, the Roaring Twenties were in
full steam, and signs of commercial progress flourished. The
trans-Atlantic flight of Charles Lindbergh inspired millions on
both sides of that ocean; just a few months earlier, the first
trans-Atlantic telephone call took place between New York and
London. Under famously business-friendly President Calvin Coolidge,
whose Cabinet included then-Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover, the
American economy not only rebounded from the post-war recession of
the Harding Administration, it soared to dizzying heights; the
economies of European nations rose alongside that of the United
States, and the "Golden Twenties," as some called them, saw
flourishing markets and renewed financial strength emerge from the
ruins of the Great War. By 1927, the flow of gold from the United
States to the vaults of Switzerland and other nations was
emblematic of the developed world's economic interdependency. These
gold coins, though, were largely from Philadelphia, since that Mint
was closest to the Eastern seaboard and thus most convenient for
trans-Atlantic traders. By contrast, the branch mint issues from
Denver and San Francisco rarely entered the commercial
mainstream.Like many other issues in the Saint-Gaudens series from the 1920s and 1930s, the 1927-S had a substantial mintage. In this case, 3.1 million pieces were produced at the San Francisco Mint for the year; this figure is slightly greater than that of the 1927 P-mint issue, now one of the most popular type coins for the series. However, almost the entire mintage was melted in the 1930s. In the 1940s the 1927-S was considered the fourth scarcest issue in the series and was thought to be even more elusive than the 1927-D. In the 1950s that perception began to change, however, as one or two pieces at a time began to show up in European gold holdings. But, like the 1926-D, it never appeared in any quantity. Very few examples are known today in all grades, and it is always a focal point of any auction. In his 1988 book, A Handbook of 20th Century United States Gold Coins, David Akers ranked the 1927-S as tenth of the 54 issues in the series in overall rarity, and 14th in the series in MS64 or better grades. While Garrett and Guth (2006) fail to assign a specific rank to the 1927-S, they emphasize the challenge it poses, particularly in better grades; in reviewing survivors, they note that " ... most are in lower Mint State grades or show minor evidence of brief circulation."
This is a superlative example, and even a casual glance shows that this coin is decidedly better than MS65. The surfaces display bright satiny mint luster and are well struck throughout. Close examination with a magnifier shows a couple of shallow marks on each side, but one would be hard pressed to find any that could be used as pedigree identifiers. The coin has a lovely orange-gold coloration with a faint trace of lilac interspersed. This piece was struck from an intermediate die state; there is just the slightest evidence of die bulging evident below the lettering in LIBERTY on the obverse, and a die crack runs through the eagle's beak on the reverse.
Only a small handful of 1927-S twenties are known today better than MS65. The combined certified population shows just six examples in MS66, four at NGC and two at PCGS, with only three coins finer, two in NGC holders and one PCGS-certified (11/07). Though Heritage auctions have presented several opportunities to acquire a Premium Gem representative of this elusive issue over the past several years, this is due to the unlikely confluence of multiple important gold collections in that timeframe, the Morse and Kutasi collections among them, and the rate at which examples have been offered has ebbed. It is entirely possible that years could pass before the opportunity to purchase a 1927-S double eagle of this caliber comes again.
From The Jacob Collection of Saint-Gaudens Double Eagles.(Registry values: N1)
Coin Index Numbers: (NGC ID# 26GJ, PCGS# 9188, Greysheet# 10185)
Weight: 33.44 grams
Metal: 90% Gold, 10% Copper
Note for clients in the European Union: This lot is considered by the European Union to be “investment gold”. We believe that it meets the criteria established in Article 344(1), point (2) of Council Directive 2006/112/EC and thus should be exempt from import VAT regardless of the selling price. Any questions or concerns about VAT should be addressed to your accountant or local tax authority.
View all of [The Jacob Collection of Saint-Gaudens Double Eagles ]
Auction Info
2008 January Orlando, FL (FUN) Signature Coin Auction #454 (go to Auction Home page)
Auction Dates
January, 2008
9th-12th
Wednesday-Saturday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 12
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 1,563
Buyer's Premium per Lot:
15% of the successful bid per lot.
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