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"A consolation prize, part 2"

DeplorableDanDeplorableDan Posts: 3,030 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited June 21, 2024 9:24AM in U.S. Coin Forum

This thread is about a two-part acquisition, the first being the NGN $5 I wrote about previously.

Moffatt coinage has a fascinating story, and out of all the privately minted gold, Moffatt & Co enjoyed the most prestigious reputation based on official assays performed in Philadelphia. For some reason, the 1853 $20 is almost like the red headed stepchild of Pioneer. It's not one of the iconic issues with a unique design, and in turn, doesn't have the same level of demand as a Mountain 10 or a Norris $5. Many collectors of Pioneer gold would opine that they rarely come nice, and finding an example with eye appeal is quite a challenge.

These coins resemble their federally issued counterparts, the main difference being the reverse legend (San Francisco California) and the inscription on the headband (Moffatt & Co). They generally come well-struck, but the luster and texture of the coin leaves much to be desired, with a grainy and dull appearance. Despite a mintage of 75,636 examples, the issue is a low R-6 and there are only around 50 examples known today. This example qualifies for condition census, PCGS has only 6 in this grade with 3 graded higher, the top pop being an MS62. CAC has approved 7 in all grades- two 55's, three 58's, and two 61's.

This example displays a bright (in a good way) yellow-gold color with some traces of russett crust in the peripheries. The cartwheel luster is exceptional for the issue, and there are no notable distactions worth mentioning. If you tried to find something wrong with it, I guess you could mention the very minor obverse rim bump and some harlines in the obverse field, but this is about as nice of an example as one could hope to find. These generally aren't very pretty coins by design. I know of a single PCGS 55+ example with an attractive red tone, and the last time I saw it it was not CAC approved. Eye appeal wise, I'm of the opinion that this coin is among the top handful in existence, and I was elated to give it a home in my collection. Below is an excerpt from Stack's where the coin sold for $45,600 in an NGC 58 CAC holder, and was subsequently crossed to PCGS before I purchased it. I liked the coin during lot viewing, but at the time I was targeting a different issue in the auction that I ended up not getting. I couldn't pass the opportunity the second time around when it was offered to me in its new wardrobe, for a modest premium over its recent APR. The Stack's pictures, as per usual, do the coin no justice.

"1853 United States Assay Office of Gold--Moffat $20. K-19. Rarity-5+ (Low R6 per McCarthy). AU-58 (NGC). CAC.

This handsome piece exhibits pretty color to well composed surfaces. Impressively sharp for issue as well as the assigned grade, a relatively smooth appearance to both sides further enhances this coin's already significant appeal.

One of the early pioneering private coiners, John Little Moffat established the firm of Moffat & Company along with his partners, Joseph R. Curtis, Philo H. Perry, and Samuel H. Ward. The firm did a thriving business and their coins were widely accepted throughout the San Francisco region. In 1850, Moffat & Company entered into a contract with the federal government to operate as the United States Assay Office of Gold while retaining the original company name. This remained the case when in January 1852 Moffat sold his interest to his partners. As part of the dissolution, Curtis, Perry and Ward would retain the Moffat & Company name and continue to strike circulating ingots under government contract. The United States Assay Office of Gold's output formed a backbone of commerce until the San Francisco Mint could begin production in earnest. In 1853, Ward died causing the remaining partners to reevaluate their government contract as assay office and establish a separate private firm that resurrected the original Moffat & Co. firm name. While a $10 piece was planned, only the $20 denomination was produced, albeit in rather significant numbers. The planned break with the government was abandoned and the firm continued to produce coins under the United States Assay Office of Gold name. The 1853 Moffat & Co. coins saw heavy though brief use, and, like many of their other privately produced brethren, most ended up in the new Mint's melting pots. Today, this issue is very scarce in all grades and remains a tangible reminder of "The Days of Old, the Days of Gold, the Days of Forty Nine."

https://auctions.stacksbowers.com/lots/view/3-13VMQF/1853-united-states-assay-office-of-gold-moffat-20-k-19-rarity-5-au-58-ngc-cac




Moffat & Co - Coinfacts

Types minted: Ingots $9.43 $14.25 $16.00 1849 Five Dollars 1849 Ten Dollars TEN D. TEN DOL., Large O's on Reverse TEN DOL., Small O's on Reverse 1850 Five Dollars FIVE DOL., Leaf ends beneath S FIVE DOL., Leaf ends beneath M 1852 Ten Dollars TEN D., Close Date, Small 880 TEN D., Wide Date, Larger 880 1853 Twenty Dollars

Notes:

While not the first private coining establishment, Moffat & Co. was by far the most important in the first period of California private gold minting. It enjoyed the highest reputation of all the coining companies, affirmed by the Federal Government when it asked the two surviving members of the firm to initiate the United States Branch Mint in San Francisco. The story of Moffat & Co. is a microcosm of the origin, rise, and fall of private gold coinage, and provides us with an idea of the importance of private gold coinage during this significant era in United States history.

Moffat & Co., smelters and assayers, was composed of four partners: John Little Moffat, Joseph R. Curtis, Philo H. Perry, and Samuel H. Ward. They were first located on the San Francisco water front, but moved when the bay's tidal action threatened their building's stability. The firm relocated their gold smelting and assaying office to the southwest corner of Clay and Dupont Streets, where Moffat continued as assayer, Curtis as manager, Ward as secretary, and Perry as cashier.

The senior member of the firm, John Little Moffat, was born in Goshen, New York, February 12, 1788. After being in the gold fields of Georgia and North Carolina for a while, Moffat returned to New York, where he was a partner with the assaying firm of Wilmarth, Moffat, Curtis. There he acquired considerable skill in assaying and metallurgical knowledge.

During the winter of 1848-49, Moffat formed a company and chose to join the many other fortune seekers in California. On February 15, 1849, the 61-year-old assayer left New York on the bark Guilford, arriving in San Francisco during the summer of 1849. It is evident from the news articles concerning this sailing that Moffat had intentions of operating a mint in California:

"The good bark Guilford sails today from the foot of Wall Street. Whatever success may attend the various adventurers, associated or individual, they will require a certain medium of circulation, or a fixed standard for their gold dust. This end may be obtained through the operations of Messrs. Moffat & Co., who go out in the Guilford, with proper assistants, and most complete machinery and apparatus, to supply the want of Californians; in other words, to establish a sort of mint, to receive the gold dust, smelt and assay it, and by their stamp to give it a currency value, which must, in the absence of a government character, be received by the merchants and consumers."

The "proper assistants" traveling Moffat were his previous employees, Curtis, Perry and Ward.

The first Moffat & Co. advertisement was placed in two California newspapers on June 21, 1849, announcing the company's new smelting and assaying business. Several testimonials appeared in this ad. One, from Beebee, Ludlow, and Company, the largest bullion dealers in the United States, equated Moffat & Co.'s assaying abilities to those of the United States and London mints. A second testimonial from several prominent businessmen mentioned Moffat's superior metallurgical skill and incorruptible integrity. But the most important endorsement came from R.J. Walker, then Secretary of the United States Treasury, who confirmed that the above-mentioned merchants were "gentlemen of the highest respectability."

The first advertisement did not identify Moffat & Co. as coiners, although they probably began issuing their famous gold rectangular ingots soon after they opened for business. In an attempt to answer the acute need for coinage, Moffat & Co. issued these ingots, valued from $9.43 to $264.00, for about two months, before shifting to coins:

"Moffat & Co., who were doing and assaying and gold brokerage business in San Francisco during the summer of 1849, issued rectangular ingots of gold, which passed current in place of circular coins. In the latter part of July or the first of August, a circular $10 piece bearing their private stamp; the first of that denomination to be struck in California and the second coins to be made in the state from the native gold by private coiners . . ."

On the bars were hand-stamped the purity or fineness of the metal, weight in pennyweight or grains, and value in dollars and cents. A further substantiation of the early appearance of these ingots is noted on the Alta California in the fall of 1850. While referring to the $50 ingots coins to be produced by the U.S. Assay Office, the article mentions that the latter will "have no particular advantage over the ingots prepared by Messrs. Moffat & Co. last year, which failed to serve as coin for public use." These early ingots were nothing more than converted raw dust and were often in odd denominations that made them awkward as a medium of exchange. Thus we realize that most of the ingots were not intended for circulation and were not widely used as a circulating medium.

The official government assay of these ingots proved them to be worth more than the amount stamped on them, the average being a quarter grain per ounce. The ingots probably were issued until the first part of July, for it was during that month that George Albrecht Ferdinand Kuner arrived in California, immediately joining Moffat & Co. as chief engraver, with his first task being to design a proposed $10 value circular coin. Kuner, a goldsmith from Bavaria, had emigrated to the United States in 1835. He left New York for the gold mines in January, 1849, and arrived in San Francisco on July 22.

In appearance, the Kuner-designed pieces were quite similar to the United States "eagles" and of very fine workmanship. They were evidently issued in August, for a letter sated August 28, 1849, appeared in the Washington National Intelligencer, mentioning the coins of a "quasi mint" in San Francisco. Moffat would have been the only private minter at this time located in San Francisco besideds Norris, Gregg, & Norris. Soon afterwards a $5 coin was also issued by Moffat, followed in 1850 by another issue of the same denomination and design.

Chief U.S. Assayer J. R. Eckfeldt calculated an average value for each $10 Moffat at $9.98 without the silver alloy added. Because Moffat & Co. offered to redeem its own coins in silver at the coin's face value the firm enjoyed a favorable reputation and its coins were widely circulated. This exceptionally high esteem, promoted by the Moffat redemption policy, most likely is why Moffat & Co., unlike every other private coiner in 1849 (except Norris, Gregg, & Norris), survived its first year in business.

It was during the first part of 1850 that there was serious agitation against private coinage. The California Legislature considered a bill introduced by Senator S. E. Woodworth which would have branded private coiners as counterfeiters, and which urged subjecting "the makers or passers of such coin to the penalty imposed upon coiners and counterfeiters." The bill would also have forced the private mints to redeem their coins in "lawful money." The Alta California printed the proposed bill along with a supportive editorial. The editor further pointed out the inability to use private coins in payment of customs, prost office fees, or at many private establishments.

Moffat replied the next day in this newspaper with a very convincing open letter. In it he reminded the legislature and editor that Mr. Brechtler of Rutherfordton, North Carolina, was still striking gold coins (some two million dollars worth having already been issued), though he was but eighty miles from the branch mint at Charlotte. Moffat also observed that while a state may not issue coins, there is no law which prohibits a private individual from striking them. Finally, he announced that not one person had ever been cheated out of one cent by his company, and if a person took his coins to the U.S. mint in Philadelphia, he would reap a profit instead of a loss.

The original proposed legislation was replaced by a compromise bill that passed on April 10, 1850. The new law forbade issuing private coins under four ounces, but it was never enforced, probably because the State Assay Office was created that month.

The new law was designed to make it difficult for private coinage to continue, since a four-ounce gold piece (the stated legal minimum value of any private coin in California) would be worth about $64 - too large a denomination for most transactions and thus not subject to wide circulation. Any need for these large denomination coins easily could be met by the State Assay Office's output. But in actuality, this law served to defeat its purpose, since there still existed a local need for fractional coinage under the prescribed legal minimum (e.g., $2½, $5, $10, $20) that only private coiners were able to satisfy.

During 1850, Moffat's coins circulated at par while all other coins and ingots, except those of the State Assay Office, were taken only at 8 percent discount. By September, Moffat & Co. was one of the two remaining private issuers of gold coins and remained do until March, 1851.

After the 1849 and 1850 issues, Moffat & Co. ceased their own coinage with but one exception. This took place in 1852 with the issuance of a $10 gold piece (the 1853 $20 coins labeled MOFFAT & CO. are not private issuances and properly are mentioned under the coinage of the U.S. Assay Office). The incidents surrounding the 1852 issue are well worth recounting.

During the interval - from September 30, 1850, until December, 1853 - Moffat & Co. held the semi-official capacity as the United States Assay Office. As soon as Congress authorized the establishment of this new assay office in San Francisco, Moffat & Co. offered its services and was subsequently awarded a coining contract. Not until January, 1851, however, did the new U.S. Assay Office under Augustus Humbert begin striking coins.

When the new official gold coins were issued, they provided the citizens with a universally accepted medium of exchange. As a result, most of the private gold coins in circulation were brought to the United States Assay Office and remade into new coins at their intrinsic gold value of $20.64 an ounce. By this time (December, 1853) the State Assay Office had ceased operation.

Instead of replacing these variously stamped denominations with like issues, the United States Assay Office struck $50 gold pieces, the only denomination it was authorized to issue. At first the effects of such a shortsighted policy were not universally felt, but soon there were few coins under the denomination of $50 in circulation.

As early as March 5, 1851, Moffat & Co. sought permission from Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Corwin to issue coins in smaller denominations. This request was rejected by Acting Secretary William L. Hodge, perhaps because expanding the Assay Office's line of coins would have made it a de facto mint, or because there were still private coiners in operation at the time, presumed to be fulfilling the fractional coinage need. But by April, adverse publicity had put the private mints out of business, and by the end of the year, the inconvenience and losses suffered from the lack of smaller denominations then the bulky $50 slugs were so acute that most merchants discounted the huge coins by 3 percent. Editorials began appearing in all the major newspapers bemoaning how the $50 slugs were a "drug" on the market.

On December 9, 1851, Acting Secretary Hodge finally advised Moffat & Co. that the Department had consented to the company's issuance of $10 and $20 gold pieces. The next day, however, this permission was rescinded.

The incensed U.S. Assayer, Augustus Humbert, wrote Secretary Corwin in December explaining how business had diminished because of the lack of small change. Humbert also mentioned that bankers were being forced to pay a premium for coins under $50, and warned that if something were not done soon, private coinage, with all its potential for fraud, would again become prevalent. At the same time, Moffat & Co. renewed its request for permission to issue smaller denomination coins.

The cavalier attitude of the government also annoyed San Francisco's businessmen, sixty of whom on the fifth of January, 1852, petitioned Moffat & Co. to issue coins in denominations smaller than the Assay Office's $50 slugs. The firm replied two days later that it had held off issuing small denominations in the hope of a favorable reply from the Treasury Department, but since the necessity for small coins was now so great, the firm would comply with their wishes regardless of the government contract. The firm further promised delivery of these issues on "Monday next" (January 12).

As promised, Moffat issued a new $10 gold piece within a week. This issue was quite different from the previous ones of Moffat & Co. and was eagerly welcomed. Moffat & Co. sought legal justification for its action, which was privately affirmed in a lengthy opinion from Attorney J. H. Mudd, eventually submitted by the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, and endorsed by U.S. Custom Collector King in California.

Two weeks later, after having issued some $86,500 worth of $10 MOFFAT & CO. pieces between the twelfth and twenty-seventh, Curtis, Perry, and Ward (Moffat having sold out on December 24, 1851 - see chapter on U.S. Assay Office) ceased that operation and, on February 12, 1852, having finally received permission (after the rescission in December) to strike $10 and $20 coins for the U.S. Assay Office, they commenced a new issue of Assay Office coins, which bore the inscription, "U.S. Assay Office" (see p. 140). The 1852 $10 Moffat & Co. coins were the last issued by them.

When Moffat left his company in the hands of Curtis, Perry, & Ward on December 24, 1851, he went to work for the San Joaquin Diving Bell Mining Company. This firm, situated on the San Joaquin River, built boats and diving bells used to dredge up the sand and gold from the river bed. Moffat worked in this capacity for many years.

A number of recent sources mention a mint at Mt. Ophir in Mariposa County, which was built and run by John L. Moffat, but the author has found no acceptable reference to confirm such a mint. A California State Historical Society sign directing the public to the ruins states that Moffat, part owner of an adjoining mine, built a mint on that site. There it is alleged he coined $50 gold pieces in February, 1851. The truth, alas, is somewhat less spectacular.

The Mt. Ophir mine was discovered by "Quartz" Johnson and later sold to the Merced Mining Co. in May 1851. The latter was formed on March 4, 1851, with the purpose of operating a quartz mill. The entire mill was not completed until February, 1852, at a cost of some $100,000. Among the major stockholders in the Merced Mining Co. were John L. Moffat and T. Butler King (the former U.S. Custom Collector for California).

The February 1852 date corresponds favorably with the time Moffat sold out his interest in his coining operation (having struck the 1852 $10 gold coins bearing his name), and officially departed the company for the mine. Evidently Moffat conceived the idea of establishing a mining company while working for the U.S. Assay Office and became actively involved when the Merced Mining Co. completed its mill in February 1852. Some gold was found on the property, but there probably was not enough to offset the expenses, and the disgruntled stockholders subsequently voted to sell the company to an English mining firm.

Moffat was an owner in the Merced Mining Co. for several months while he was still the principal in Moffat & Co. (minters). The period of dual association by Moffat also was while Moffat & Co. issued some $50 gold pieces under its U.S. Assay Office contract (see chapter on U.S. Assay Office). But the mine was not in operation until February 1852, about the same time Moffat sold out his coining firm to Curtis, Perry & Ward.

It is doubtful that the mine yielded much gold, let alone enough in the brief period of the dual Moffat company affiliations (mint and mine) to have warranted any coins having been produced by the San Francisco-based Moffat & Co. or any local (Mt. Ophir) affiliation.

--Reprinted with permission of the author from Donald H. Kagin's, "Private Gold Coins and Patterns of the United States", copyright 1981, Arco Publishing, Inc. of New York, pages 85-92.

Sources and/or recommended reading: "Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia Of U.S. And Colonial Coins" by Walter Breen

"Private Gold Coins and Patterns of the United States" by Donald H. Kagin

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    rnkmyer1rnkmyer1 Posts: 820 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Excellent dissertation of this historical piece. Actually long on eye appeal - love it!

    “The thrill of the hunt never gets old”

    PCGS Registry: Screaming Eagles
    Copperindian

    Retired sets: Soaring Eagles
    Copperindian

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    Inspired70Inspired70 Posts: 522 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Dan:

    Really well done on all accounts.

    The coin itself is both impressive in its large size and excellent quality state for this historic pioneer gold. Also, your description and attention to detail is both comprehensive and consistent with everything I have seen you do, which is to say, exceptional.

    Congratulations like always on being a trend-setter, academic scholar of great history, and above all a first class numismatist!

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    lermishlermish Posts: 2,302 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I very much appreciate the reverse SF, CA legend, it really ties it nicely to the time period. Truly lovely!!!

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    NicNic Posts: 3,354 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Inspired70 said:
    Dan:

    Really well done on all accounts.

    The coin itself is both impressive in its large size and excellent quality state for this historic pioneer gold. Also, your description and attention to detail is both comprehensive and consistent with everything I have seen you do, which is to say, exceptional.

    Congratulations like always on being a trend-setter, academic scholar of great history, and above all a first class numismatist!

    +1 Agree with everything @Inspired70 stated so eloquently. Thank you for sharing DDan.

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    FlyingAlFlyingAl Posts: 3,050 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Wow Dan - incredible read. Very interesting the Treasury was so against private issue gold, and yet still restricted the Assay Office. How many gold slugs were struck in place of the $10 and $20 denominations, and were most melted?

    Coin Photographer.

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    DeplorableDanDeplorableDan Posts: 3,030 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @FlyingAl said:
    Wow Dan - incredible read. Very interesting the Treasury was so against private issue gold, and yet still restricted the Assay Office. How many gold slugs were struck in place of the $10 and $20 denominations, and were most melted?

    Alex, Im not sure if exact figures are known and I'd have to do a deep dive to even get an estimate. I will talk to Dave again in a few weeks and get his thoughts.

    Yes, most were absolutely melted for various reasons. Its quite ironic how the USAOG could not get authorization to strike smaller pieces despite the immense need for a more practical medium of exchange. The $50 slugs were cumbersome and annoying for the general public, and were already trading at a 2-4% discount from their face value. Wass Molitor stepped up to meet demand since they operated without the oversight of the US Treasury, and they had reason to believe that the "Act to regulate the coining of money by individuals" would not be enforced.

    Ironically, once they started to satisfy the public demand for smaller denominations, they faced the oh-so-common antipathy of the public eye, and accusations of debasement. Later on it was proven that their coinage was of a high standard, and their $5 and $10 denominations traded at a 2-4% premium over the Assay Office coins.

    The vast majority of all pioneer coinage was melted at the San Francisco mint in the mid-late 1850's to make Double Eagles. By that time, Pioneer gold, which never achived "legal tender" status , was inferior to the federal issues in commerce. There was much speculation that the private coiners were debasing the issues too much, but most of the early assays performed never had accounted for the silver value. Years later, it was determined that they were pretty darn close.

    Founder- Peak Rarities
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    RobertScotLoverRobertScotLover Posts: 736 ✭✭✭✭✭

    What else can I dare to say but the word "EXCEPTIONAL" comes to mind in its entirety

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    breakdownbreakdown Posts: 2,015 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Dan-
    A+ on the post and a great coin for your collection.
    If not careful, I could go deep down the well of learning about Territorial coinage.

    "Look up, old boy, and see what you get." -William Bonney.

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    FlyingAlFlyingAl Posts: 3,050 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @DeplorableDan said:

    @FlyingAl said:
    Wow Dan - incredible read. Very interesting the Treasury was so against private issue gold, and yet still restricted the Assay Office. How many gold slugs were struck in place of the $10 and $20 denominations, and were most melted?

    Alex, Im not sure if exact figures are known and I'd have to do a deep dive to even get an estimate. I will talk to Dave again in a few weeks and get his thoughts.

    Yes, most were absolutely melted for various reasons. Its quite ironic how the USAOG could not get authorization to strike smaller pieces despite the immense need for a more practical medium of exchange. The $50 slugs were cumbersome and annoying for the general public, and were already trading at a 2-4% discount from their face value. Wass Molitor stepped up to meet demand since they operated without the oversight of the US Treasury, and they had reason to believe that the "Act to regulate the coining of money by individuals" would not be enforced.

    Ironically, once they started to satisfy the public demand for smaller denominations, they faced the oh-so-common antipathy of the public eye, and accusations of debasement. Later on it was proven that their coinage was of a high standard, and their $5 and $10 denominations traded at a 2-4% premium over the Assay Office coins.

    The vast majority of all pioneer coinage was melted at the San Francisco mint in the mid-late 1850's to make Double Eagles. By that time, Pioneer gold, which never achived "legal tender" status , was inferior to the federal issues in commerce. There was much speculation that the private coiners were debasing the issues too much, but most of the early assays performed never had accounted for the silver value. Years later, it was determined that they were pretty darn close.

    Very interesting. Did the mint pull the Pioneer itself or was it willingly surrendered by the owners to be coined by the Mint?

    Coin Photographer.

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    goldengolden Posts: 9,226 ✭✭✭✭✭

    A very nice coin and a great writeup.

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    DMWJRDMWJR Posts: 5,993 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I enjoyed that very much. At the Jan FUN show, we had the most excellent presentation of frontier gold I’ve ever heard at the USRGCC meeting. It’a fascinating era for sure!!

    Doug
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    skier07skier07 Posts: 3,823 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @DMWJR said:
    I enjoyed that very much. At the Jan FUN show, we had the most excellent presentation of frontier gold I’ve ever heard at the USRGCC meeting. It’a fascinating era for sure!!

    Is there a video of the presentation?

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    DMWJRDMWJR Posts: 5,993 ✭✭✭✭✭

    No video. The club stopped videoing these things years ago. This was by Don Kagin and David McCarthy. Usually dinner and presentation is reasonably short. This went on for three hours and no one dared leave. It was one of the best presentations of any kind I have ever seen.

    Doug
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    oldabeintxoldabeintx Posts: 1,737 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Just ordered their new book. I’m hooked.

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    ashelandasheland Posts: 22,917 ✭✭✭✭✭

    That coin is extraordinary!
    You have built an incredible collection of these!

    Congratulations 🥳

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