Benson Pedigree Help
I have some of the early gold $5s dating back to the Benson sale with Goldberg in 2002-2003. From my understanding the collection was put together via father and son until stopped in 1950 and then left in a SDB until the Goldberg sales.
Any tips on how I might find the sales or origin of these coins pre-Benson? Pre-1950 literature is limited and I'm guessing plates even more difficult to come by in those catalogs. Would Goldberg have any information or even be willing to help? I did email them to see if they could sell me extra copies of the Benson catalogs if they had them, but they never even responded to that request.
Thanks for any insight.
Collector of Original Early Gold with beginnings in Proof Morgan collecting.
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Here's some info on Benson:
https://www.ngccoin.com/boards/blogs/entry/9969-silver-roosevelt-dimes-with-pedigrees/
@Proofmorgan , below are links to all the Goldberg auctions on their website including links to each of the three Benson sales I am aware of. Their "View online catalog" is not the same as looking at a catalog or its PDF as it does not include any intro info that would explain the collection's history. I think I have a copy of the first sale, but not the other two. Would have to dig it out to see if it had a useful intro.
Also, it looks like these were multi-consignor auctions and not every coin is from the Benson collection (probably most are not unless identified as ex-Benson in the lot description, not sure if all are even identified). Ex-Benson auction sale does not necessarily mean it came from the Benson collection.
The Newman Numismatic Portal list the catalogs but does not have them scanned. It just links back a page at the Goldberg website that then has a link to their online list of auctions (linked below) and not directly to a particular sale in the ones I checked.
Also, there is a link to some early Half Eagles that are noted as ex-Benson collection from Benson auction Part III February 24-25, 2003. These have some info with each lot on when and where acquired listed among lots from other consignors.
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All Goldberg auctions on one page. :
images.goldbergauctions.com/php/auctions.php
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Benson Part I February 16-20, 2001:
images.goldbergauctions.com/php/toc_auc.php?site=1&lang=1&sale=8
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Benson Part II February 18-19, 2002:
images.goldbergauctions.com/php/toc_auc.php?site=1&lang=1&sale=13
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Benson Part III February 24-25, 2003:
http://images.goldbergauctions.com/php/toc_auc.php?site=1&lang=1&sale=17
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Benson early Half Eagles that are noted as ex-Benson collection from Benson auction Part III February 24-25, 2003. Not sure if these are the only ones or if the other two sales had any. If listed as ex-Benson in the lot, any prior history known by Goldberg's is likely listed there with the lot. :
images.goldbergauctions.com/php/chap_auc.php?site=1&lang=1&sale=17&chapter=72&page=1
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"To Be Esteemed Be Useful" - 1792 Birch Cent --- "I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." - Lily Tomlin
Goldberg auctions have excellent catalogs and photos online.
The last link in @WinLoseWin 's post above has all the answers!
Each of the Benson collection coins shows when and from whom it was purchased and the original price.
And there are plates for everything, so you can identify if your coins are from the Benson collection or from other lots in that sale.
Most of the Benson collection coins on that first chapter are shown as purchased from dealers like Ira S. Reed, but one is sourced to an Ira S. Reed December 2, 1944 auction lot 1078.
You can view those older auction catalogs on the Newman Numismatic Portal; they are organized by auction company name:
https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/auctioncompanies
The above lot 1078 is on page 38.
https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/auctionlots?AucCoId=511551&AuctionId=520958
All the lot description says is "1078. 1813 Extra Fine."
And the collection was from Frank M. Selmier of North Vernon, Indiana.
https://ia601001.us.archive.org/BookReader/BookReaderImages.php?zip=/26/items/saleno34publicau00reed/saleno34publicau00reed_jp2.zip&file=saleno34publicau00reed_jp2/saleno34publicau00reed_0040.jp2&id=saleno34publicau00reed&scale=4&rotate=0
Thanks, Clint.
Reed in turn could have been buying out of Stack's, so it might be useful to page through Stack's sales for that period.
Thank you very much. That is very helpful. Unfortunately the pieces I have are not those noted as Benson, but are from the sale. So I’ll have to do some other research To see if I can plate match the coins. They are mid MS so they won’t be the hardest to locate, but the change in grading standards could make them old AUs, who knows. It’s all in good fun and exciting to play detective.