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MrEureka is in very deep trouble!
Just saw this article online:
Auctioned one-of-a-kind coins a loss to Canadian collectors
ROBERT AARON COINS
SPECIAL TO THE STAR HOBBIES
In one of the most controversial moves in its 95-year history, the Royal Canadian Mint struck two one-of-a-kind coins to generate money for a couple of Queen Elizabeth's official Canadian charities.
Both coins feature the new effigy of the Queen on the obverse. The first of the two coins features the 2003 silver dollar voyageur canoe design on the reverse and the other features the 2002 Silver Dollar Jubilee design. The coins were auctioned separately.
Using eBay, an American-owned online auction house, the Humane Society of Canada received $62,600 and Save the Children Canada received $55,100.01 from the sale of the two gold coins. The 10-day auction closed late last month.
This is the first time that the Canadian mint has minted single-strike coins, and it opens the door to future single-strike issues for wealthy collectors. The beneficiary of future sales might well be the mint rather than worthy charities.
Another problem with the sale is that the buyer was Andy Lustig, an American coin dealer. These two numismatic curios now travel south of the border, and are lost to Canadians. Since only one of each coin was minted, the Bank of Canada numismatic collection will never be able to have a complete collection of Canadian coins.
All in all, it's a loss to the fabric of the coin hobby in this country and sets a dangerous precedent for the future. Canadian coins should be minted in sufficient quantities so that every collector who wants one and is willing to pay the price can purchase one.
Single-strike issues are elitist and tarnish the mint's image as a producer of coins for the Canadian public at large.
It would have been far more meaningful for the mint to donate $1 from the sale of 117,000 coins and give that money to the two charities — but then the donation might not have made the same publicity splash.
The blame for this idea falls on the shoulders of David Dingwall, former Liberal politico and now CEO of the Royal Canadian Mint. Hopefully, he won't do it again.
Auctioned one-of-a-kind coins a loss to Canadian collectors
ROBERT AARON COINS
SPECIAL TO THE STAR HOBBIES
In one of the most controversial moves in its 95-year history, the Royal Canadian Mint struck two one-of-a-kind coins to generate money for a couple of Queen Elizabeth's official Canadian charities.
Both coins feature the new effigy of the Queen on the obverse. The first of the two coins features the 2003 silver dollar voyageur canoe design on the reverse and the other features the 2002 Silver Dollar Jubilee design. The coins were auctioned separately.
Using eBay, an American-owned online auction house, the Humane Society of Canada received $62,600 and Save the Children Canada received $55,100.01 from the sale of the two gold coins. The 10-day auction closed late last month.
This is the first time that the Canadian mint has minted single-strike coins, and it opens the door to future single-strike issues for wealthy collectors. The beneficiary of future sales might well be the mint rather than worthy charities.
Another problem with the sale is that the buyer was Andy Lustig, an American coin dealer. These two numismatic curios now travel south of the border, and are lost to Canadians. Since only one of each coin was minted, the Bank of Canada numismatic collection will never be able to have a complete collection of Canadian coins.
All in all, it's a loss to the fabric of the coin hobby in this country and sets a dangerous precedent for the future. Canadian coins should be minted in sufficient quantities so that every collector who wants one and is willing to pay the price can purchase one.
Single-strike issues are elitist and tarnish the mint's image as a producer of coins for the Canadian public at large.
It would have been far more meaningful for the mint to donate $1 from the sale of 117,000 coins and give that money to the two charities — but then the donation might not have made the same publicity splash.
The blame for this idea falls on the shoulders of David Dingwall, former Liberal politico and now CEO of the Royal Canadian Mint. Hopefully, he won't do it again.
Andy Lustig
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
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trouble
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Free publicity should be the worst punishment I suffer!
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
I don't venture to World and Ancients often, but, I enjoyed reading these threads today! I hope I don't miss updates on them.
Ron
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
I shant post to it. It's tainted.
Clankeye
I'm surprised they don't enact a "Treasure Trove" law like they have in the UK.
<< <i>Dear Sirs:
I have to say I, an American with many Canadian friends, was quite dismayed at the jingoistic tone of Mr. Robert Aaron's "Special to the Star" article of Oct. 27th entitled "Auctioned one-of-a-kind coins a loss to Canadian collectors." As he frames it, "another problem with the sale" was that the buyer, Andy Lustig, an American coin dealer, contributed more to the Humane Society of Canada and Save the Children Canada than a Canadian collector or dealer was willing to. And, oh, "the Bank of Canada numismatic collection will never be able to have a complete collection of Canadian coins" and "it's a loss to the fabric of the coin hobby in this country and sets a dangerous precedent for the future."
Get real!! This is a hobby for heaven's sake!!! And never say "never," for as the author notes, Mr. Lustig is a dealer - a buyer and seller of coins. Andy Lustig is a good friend of mine and I know him to be a kind and generous person. What he plans to do with those coins I do not know, but should the Bank of Canada or some benefactor of same were to approach him about enquiring of his willingness to sell them, I seriously doubt that he would summarily show them his door.
As a collector who has spent many years encouraging American collectors to explore the beauty and history of other nations' coinage and currency, I'm delighted that Mr. Lustig and other Americans are buying and collecting Canadian coins, rare and common. Since the Bank of Canada produces some of the most admired numismatic offerings of any nation among world coin collectors, it's more a tribute to Canadian artistry and quality. And if, as a result, it helps educate a "geography-challenged" Yank about how to find Canada on the map, well, so much the better, eh?
Mark A. Kaiser
Arlington, Texas >>
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
Obscurum per obscurius
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
These two numismatic curios now travel south of the border, and are lost to Canadians. Since only one of each coin was minted, the Bank of Canada numismatic collection will never be able to have a complete collection of Canadian coins.
<< <i>Um... did you mean "Royal Canadian Mint" instead of "Bank of Canada"?
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Since the Bank of Canada produces some of the most admired numismatic offerings of any nation among world coin collectors, it's more a tribute to Canadian artistry and quality.
Obscurum per obscurius
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
Carl
Come on over ... to The Dark Side!
<< <i>Andy, how much was your client willing to pay? I knew this was going to happen, they hardly even advertized the fact, it didnt even come out in Coin World until afterwards! Im jealous! I knew I should have taken out a loan! >>
Sorry, WSM-- you're not Canadian enough.
Obscurum per obscurius
The public school system in Canada IMO seems to be heavy on teaching left wing politics and anti-Americanism. Or at least there's alot of teachers who teach that way, directly or not. The odds of that letter being published (as much truth as it contains) is next to nil, especially since it's from a Texan.
Ebay
<< <i>especially since it's from a Texan >>
I agree
As for the coins themelves and their anonymous buyer (what a question WSM
myEbay
DPOTD 3
So the coins have been back in Canada for a month now and not one Canadian newspaper has publicly thanked me. It just ain't right.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.