LOT #3209 |
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1879 $4 Flowing Hair, Judd-1635, Pollock-1833, JD-1, R.3, PR67★ Cameo NGC....
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Sold on Jan 14, 2026 for:
$341,600.00
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Description
1879 Flowing Hair Stella, Judd-1635
PR67★ Cameo, Among the Finest Known
1879 $4 Flowing Hair, Judd-1635, Pollock-1833, JD-1, R.3, PR67★
Cameo NGC. Bright, uniformly yellow-gold surfaces grace this
extraordinarily attractive stella, with none of the reddish patina
normally seen. Another extraordinary quality is the unfathomable
depth of reflectivity seen in the fields, certainly not a given on
a stella. The thick mint frost over the devices sets up a strong
cameo effect against the "black" mirrored fields. There are no
obvious contact marks on either side, and pedigree markers appear
to be limited to two small reverse planchet flakes: one right of
the inverted V at the bottom of the star, and another right of that
star.Many numismatists have commented over the years on how outlandish a conception were the 1879 stellas, metric dollars, and metric goloid dollars. Some have attributed it to naïveté on the part of Iowa Rep. John A. Kasson and/or lack of a working knowledge of international commerce among members of the Congressional Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, a committee that Kasson chaired. Walter Breen in his Complete Encyclopedia cast Kasson as one of three Congressional villains that included Richard A. "Silver Dick" Bland and William Darrah Kelley, cronies of Western silver-mining interests who were ever in search of new foreign and domestic uses for silver, including the twenty cent piece, the Trade and Morgan dollars, and the various international coinage concepts.
But in a perusal of the literature on the subject, what emerges as even more curious than the preposterous intended use of the stellas is the story of the so-called "originals" versus "restrike" stellas -- a fallacy discussed by more than a few numismatists. Typical comments are these, from the 10th edition of the Judd pattern reference:
"It was announced by someone, perhaps a Mint official, that 15 of the 1879 Flowing Hair $4 Stellas were struck, these as patterns, but there was a sufficient demand for them that a few hundred more were struck for congressmen, who are allowed to acquire them for $6.50 each. This was an era of great secrecy at the Mint, and virtually the entire pattern coinage of 1879, including the 'Washlady' and Schoolgirl silver coins, were produced for the private profit of Mint officials. ... The total number made is not known, but has been estimated to be 600 to 700, all but 15 of which are believed to have been struck in calendar year 1880 from the 1879-dated dies."
If this were indeed an "era of great secrecy at the Mint," why believe that only 15 originals were struck? It is perhaps more plausible to believe that all of the 1879 Flowing Hair coins were struck at one time and the mintage was incorrectly given as 15, with mentions of later restrikes intended to divert the curious from the intended motive, profit on the part of Mint officials and the well-connected.
Here is the story from Walter Breen, which also demonstrates remarkably shaky reasoning:
"Only a few original proof sets (Stella, goloid, and 'goloid metric' dollars) were made in Dec. 1879 from the Barber [Flowing Hair] designs; those with the Morgan [Coiled Hair] obvs. were clandestine issues. At least 425 additional sets followed in 1880 from the 1879 Barber dies, by order of Congress ...
"As the same dies were used for original Stellas and official restrikes, distinguishing between them has been a difficult problem. Coiled hair or Morgan Stellas of 1879 are not known to have been restruck; they normally lack the central striations (on the strip from which these planchets were cut) found on most 1879 Flowing Hair Stellas and all the 1880 issues. Presumably the very rare 1879 Flowing Hair coins without central striations are the originals. None has been auctioned in many years, though many restrikes have been marketed as originals owing to their having correct weights. ..."
All of the 1879 Coiled Hair stellas that Heritage has handled indeed do show striations / roller marks in the center, overturning Breen's theories of two striking periods and a small number of originals lacking the striations. Concerning the planchet striations, as we wrote in the Lemus Collection catalog:
"As time goes by and no pieces appear to lack the striations, many numismatists have concluded that neither were the pattern gold pieces produced in that odd metric alloy, but rather they were struck on regular 900 fine planchets rolled out to 80% of the thickness of a half eagle, accounting for the roller marks or die striations seen on all known gold pieces."
While present, the striations are lesser on the present example than typically found and are absolutely vertical instead of nearly-horizontal. Neither of the major services has certified a numerically finer Cameo Flowing Hair stella, and when one sees this coin, it is clear why. This piece is as close to technical perfection as one can ever expect. A true opportunity for the collector who has been holding out for that special coin.
Ex: FUN Signature (Heritage, 1/2010), lot 2148; Central States Signature (Heritage, 4/2015), lot 5297.
From The Costa Family Collection, Part II.
Coin Index Numbers: (Variety PCGS# 106661, Base PCGS# 88057)
Weight: 7.00 grams
Metal: 86% Gold, 4% Silver, 10% Copper
View all of [The Costa Family Collection, Part II ]
Auction Info
2026 January 14 - 17 FUN US Coins Signature® Auction #1390 (go to Auction Home page)
Auction Dates
January, 2026
14th-17th
Wednesday-Saturday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 24
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 496
Buyer's Premium per Lot:
22% of the successful bid per lot.
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