Brilliant Post Baltimore Rare Coin Auction 27 pt 2 Day 3
By Key Date Coins
Jul 11, 2024
148 Route 73 Suite 3-184 Voorhees, NJ 08043 USA, United States

We are proud to present our 3 day Brilliant Post Baltimore Rare Coin Auction! This is a not to be missed event!

This auction has some HUGE, not to be missed, stunning coins. The consignees came right from Baltimore, directly to you to be sold in our auction.

Join us on Tuesday, 7/09 - Thursday 7/11!

IMPORTANT INFORMATION- Our 3 day evening auction (The High Dollar Coins) from 7:30pm-2am ET with Corey will be on MONDAY, July 8th- WEDNESDAY, July 10th. Corey will NOT be on Thursday Night. MONDAY will he hosted INSIDE of the AM auction in 27 pt 1 at 7:30pm.

Every auction has something for everyone, there is always a bargain to be had! We put together the highest quality items in the bullion, coins, currency, and exonumia categories. From large estates to small estates, consignments from around the country, we have it all! We have every type of rare estate that almost every auction has something you will never see again! Ranging from Morgans and Rare Gold to VAMS and Varieties to Currency and Proof Sets, there really is something for every kind of bidder.

We will auction lots 5761-7560 on Day 1, 7561-9360 on Day 2, and 9361-11,160 on Day 3.

The AM Portion of the auction will begin at 10:00am and will end at 7:30pm. This portion will be auctioned by Heidi, Jordan, Shanny, Riley, and Conri.

The PM Portion of the auction (The higher value lots) will begin at 7:30pm and will end when all of the lots have closed for that day. This portion will be auctioned by Corey and Sandi.

Day 1:

- AM: Lots 5761-7200

- PM: Lots 7201-7560

Day 2:

- AM: Lots 7561-9000

- PM: Lots 9001-9360

Day 3:

- AM: Lots 9361- 10,800

- PM: Lots 10,801-11,160

Additionally, going forward for every auction, we will be offering an Early Bird Sale! This will entail a HUGE 5% Buyers Premium Discount on the first 100 lots of the auction each day!

We can't wait to see you at the auction! 

More details
The auction has ended

LOT 6623:

***Auction Highlight*** 1909 vdb Lincoln Cent TOP POP! 1c Graded ms68 RD BY SEGS (fc)

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Sold for: $750
Price including buyer’s premium: $ 885
Start price:
$ 20,000
Estimated price :
$1,750 - $3,500
Buyer's Premium: 18%
Auction took place on Jul 11, 2024 at Key Date Coins
tags:

***Auction Highlight*** 1909 vdb Lincoln Cent TOP POP! 1c Graded ms68 RD BY SEGS (fc)
***Auction Highlight*** 1909 vdb TOP POP! Lincoln Cent 1c Graded ms68 RD BY SEGS. Always sought after date. Always popular. Beginning with the use of a special star punch, then the use of an entire name, and then initials, designer's have left their marks on U.S. coins they created throughout the course of American history. Yet, in 1909, when the new Lincoln cent debuted, Victor D. Brenner's initials at the bottom of the reverse produced for the first time the question of whether or not such recognition was appropriate on federal coinage. In A Guide Book of Lincoln Cents, Q. David Bowers transcribes an excerpt from an August 5th, 1909, New York Times article that described the controversial initials and Treasury Secretary Franklin MacVeagh's order to cease production of the cents until the initials could be removed from a new hub. Bowers adds: "The Times story of 'widespread criticism' about the use of the V.D.B. initials may have been something related in a communication from the Treasury Department, or there may have been another source. Of the dozens of newspaper accounts I have read, none published before August 5 revealed any such dissatisfaction. Later, much folklore was invented. Some states that using the artist's initials constituted advertising for a private individual, while others contended that when the Treasury Department 'discovered' Brenner was Jewish, this caused the change. None of this is reflected in any contemporary Treasury records or printed accounts."Printed descriptions of the design, including one in the August 1909 edition of The Numismatist, merely mentioned the designer's initials in the course of describing the new coins, without any adverse opinions given. In the September/October 1909 edition of the same periodical Farran Zerbe stated: "In the removal of the marks to identify the designer of the Lincoln cent a great injustice has been done sculptor-artist Victor D. Brenner. No V.D.B., but Brenner was to appear on the new coin. When change was made from name to initials the artist was too modest to protest. Now that all identifying marks have been removed, it is not the particular instance, but it is for art -- that it may not be robbed of its reward -- that Mr. Brenner and all patrons of art should protest."Despite strong opposition to the move from the numismatic and art communities, Brenner's initials were indeed removed from the cent hubs in August 1909. For the next nine years, cents were struck without due recognition given to the designer, but then in 1918, after the passing of Chief Engraver Charles Barber, and after the lapsing of MacVeagh's position as Treasury Secretary, Brenner's initials were restored to the Lincoln cent, being placed on the bottom edge of the Lincoln bust.Collectors today, as they did in August 1909, recognize the uniqueness of the 1909 VDB cent and the historical significance it represents. Because the coin was struck in large quantities (nearly 28 million pieces) before it was discontinued, examples are readily available today. Yet, in MS68 Red, precious few coins have survived. A Key Date's Pick, Bid to Win, Don't let it get Away, you might not find its equal Coin. I give this coin my highest recommendation

catalog
  Previous item
Next item