Skip to main content
Go to accessibility options

Description

Splendid Plain Edge Silver Proof Restrike Gunmoney Crown

James II silver Proof Restrike "Gunmoney" Crown 1690-Dated PR65 NGC, Dublin mint(?), KM103.1a (Rare; listed as overstruck), S-6585, D&F-371, cf. Timmins-pp. 120-121 (see note 3). 20.42gm. Plain edge. Immensely captivating, and rather enigmatic as an issue, the details of the strike rendered in a pinpoint accuracy that would simply be unthinkable for the notoriously crude base metal "gunmetal" money produced during James II's exile in Ireland. Due to the need for yet further coinage felt by the Jacobite authorities in Dublin by March 1689, on April 21st 1690 (by Order No. LXXXV) a pattern crown was produced in white metal with several copper plugs. Owing to the naturally corrosion-prone nature of the metal, these pieces do not seem to have been released for circulation, with those that do survive down to the present being few and far between and almost universally found in bad condition. Timmins has reported, in response to known examples struck in silver and gold with and without edge lettering, that there is some suggestion that around the 1780s, Matthew Boulton struck crowns from the captured original dies to order at his workshop in Soho, although Spink's Standard Catalogue states that these were not produced from original dies. For his part, Timmins notes that "there is one silver crown listed in the British Museum (ref 1935,1117.716) that is listed as a silver proof."

While this TRIVMPHO legend type is the only of these restrikes not cataloged by Spink as "extremely rare", we have been able to find no records of the type becoming available within the last 15 years, though a similar example (struck from the same dies) did appear as part of the John J. Pittman Collection, Part III (lot 3977), apparently part of a six-coin Proof set which he had acquired from Spink in 1959. This alone suggests a supreme scarcity that on many counts may seem to rival that of the original pewter pieces. Certainly achieving a new level of desirability on the basis of its fine style and execution alone, we cannot doubt that the offering, with its esteemed pedigree, will appear as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for collectors of the coinage of the Isles, and will demand bidders to place their best bids.

Ex. Spink Auction 6028 (February 2006, Lot 177); Privately purchased from Spink in June 1986

From the Cape Coral Collection of European Crowns

Metal: Silver
Diameter: 34mm




View all of [The Cape Coral Collection of European Crowns ]

View Certification Details from NGC

Auction Info

Auction Dates
January, 2021
21st-22nd Thursday-Friday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 20
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 2,788

Buyer's Premium per Lot:
20% of the successful bid per lot.

Sold on Jan 21, 2021 for: $33,600.00
Track Item