Any updates on SS Republic type I $20 gold populations?
northcoin
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Odyssey published population figures dated March 27, 2005 for ten and twenty dollar gold coins it had recovered from the SS Republic shipwreck. Is it likely there have been additional coins to add since then? I am particularly interested in the 1861 $20 with a then reported 448 having been holdered with 337 of them being assigned grades from AU45 to MS64. Most were between AU58 and MS62 with the largest number (102) graded MS61. I am looking at an NTC holdered MS65 that obviously was either not graded by NGC or assigned a lower grade. My guess is that it was probably a MS61 just becasue of the numbers but it does look very nice with no scratches. Would welcome anyone's views on value of such a coin. NTC does not identify the coin as a shipwreck coin but it looks a lot like the ones I have seen from them. I assume there may have been some 1861 twenties from the Brother Jonathan wreck as well, but it seems most of those were from the San Francisco mint.
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Does that mean the coin looks like it has been cleaned?
I would guess that any Type I double eagle in an NTC holder is in that holder because it wouldn't be slabbed by anyone else (except perhaps NCS or an ANACS net-graded holder).
My advice: run, don't walk, away from the coin.
I would also have to presume that the price guides do take into account the increased supply of shipwreck Type I double eagles.
Check out the Southern Gold Society
Also, most experienced collectors consider both abrasion and exposure to chemicals to be "cleaning", even if only one of these methods leaves scratches.
Check out the Southern Gold Society
1) The salvage is complete.
2) The NGC "partial population report" from about one year ago is indeed the final gold coin tally.
3) They only found about 20-25% of the gold that was expected to be on board the ship. There is speculation that passengers carried gold off the ship as it was going down.
<< <i>I have the answers! I just spoke to John Albanese, advisor to Odyssey, and he informed me of the following:
1) The salvage is complete.
2) The NGC "partial population report" from about one year ago is indeed the final gold coin tally.
3) They only found about 20-25% of the gold that was expected to be on board the ship. There is speculation that passengers carried gold off the ship as it was going down. >>
If some of the gold was carried off the ship by passengers as the ship went down, I wonder how much was abandoned as they had to swim or be picked up by lifeboats and other small watercraft. I think it would be nearly impossible to find small caches of discarded gold that was dropped hundreds of yards from the wreck.
Obscurum per obscurius
The theory about people carrying coins off of the sinking ship is interesting.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)