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The 1901 Pan American Medals of Hermon MacNeil. Or where the heck has Weiss been for the last year?

WeissWeiss Posts: 9,942 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited November 3, 2023 12:04PM in U.S. Coin Forum

Any of you lot who cares (and I get that few probably do :smile: ) might have noticed I've been absent on the CU forums for the last 8 or 10 months. If you're interested, I'll tell you why...

Any time we mention the 1901 Pan American medals by Hermon Atkins MacNeil (Standing Liberty Quarter) on this forum, the consensus seems to be overwhelmingly positive. But if you've tried to acquire them, you know that they are very difficult to find. Surviving pops seem to be a guessing game, with some sources offering incredibly small numbers. Guesses as to how many were made and how many exist vary widely from thousands to hundreds to a handful. In short: There seem to be lots of questions but few answers about these pieces.

Four years ago give or take, and inspired by the census created for the Lesher dollars (lesherdollars.com), I kicked around the idea of logging examples of the enigmatic MacNeil pieces. Before I knew it, I had done just that: I had a census going.
For several years I've scoured the internet and auction listings, tracking examples and adding them to a spreadsheet. The more examples I added, the more details I included. Metal, name, source, sale price, slabbed or raw, condition, etc.
Along the way, I visited museum websites, websites devoted to medals. I got resources and read the information available about them from Baxter, Marquese, etc. and I took notes on what I had observed. After a couple of years, new examples appeared less and less frequently in my searches. But the notes I made grew and, again before I knew it, I had an outline for an article. And I started to form some observations. Among them: It's not just perception. These medals are really quite scarce. Also, few have been graded. And many of them would probably grade details if they were submitted.

The more I compiled, the more nagging questions kept emerging. If over 3,000 of these medals had been issued, why are they so hard to find? Are they really just in strong hands? Had they been melted or destroyed? Are they all overseas? Or is it possible they weren't issued in numbers as large as previously thought? Raw numbers are great for accountants. But I found these numbers made much more sense given context: The availability of these pieces compared to the medals from the expos that bookended it--the Columbian Expo before it and the St. Louis expo a few years later. That comparison really emphasized and defined their scarcity. Especially when you consider all of these pieces were made by the most important coin designers of the early 20th century: Barber, Saint-Gaudens, Weinman, MacNeil.

Anyway, I'm trying to tell a story here.

Middle of last year I had a rough draft of the article on the Pan American medals. And I was getting ready to put it up here on the forum and I realized that a 15-page diatribe about these pieces was probably too much. So I reached out to a respected journal of coin collecting (let's call them The Snumismatist) to ask if they might be interested. And it seemed they were. So late 2022 I sent them an edited copy with all the footnotes, end notes, sources, etc. I was right proud of it. And they seemed to like the idea.

But then they said they were backlogged and that it would take a few months to catch up :neutral: Fine, after the start of the year.

About that time, I, like I'm sure many of us, realized that we kept seeing the same questions from new collectors here on CU and on other venues. That seemed especially true for bullion buyers. My son had put out some videos on YouTube a few years back and one went viral, eventually getting nearly 4 million views. So after the first of the year in the dead of winter, when I had a little down time, I followed my son's lead and made a few videos on the basics of bullion for new buyers, some of the ways that bullion crosses over into more traditional coin collections, etc. Just for the sake of keeping myself busy, I never thought they'd be seen by anyone.

But the videos actually kind of took off. They went from 10 views to 50 views to a few hundred views. And the more videos I released, the more people watched them.

Spring was coming, so I reached back out to The Snumismatist and was told...it would be several more months. In the mean time I kept myself busy with videos. A few videos turned into a dozen, then two dozen.

Finally in June I reached back out to The Snumismatist.

And they declined the article.

It was apparently too long. And they didn't understand why I'd "dedicated valuable space to other coin designers".

So I did what any rational person would do. I thanked them for their time.
Then I built a website from scratch to share the census and my findings with the numismatic community. And I made what I hoped would be a definitive 2-part video series on these pieces. The second of which premiers tonight (Friday, November 3rd) on my YouTube channel that has grown to over a thousand subscribers, 50 videos, and over 60,000 views since this spring.

You'll find the website at www.panamcensus.com
And you'll find the videos on YouTube, where I'm known as WhyteCross (a translation of my name).

https://www.youtube.com/embed/videoseries?list=PLebJigXP2OH_4UmDOMJHkvEO6aCAkGiTP

And now you know where I've been ;)

We are like children who look at print and see a serpent in the last letter but one, and a sword in the last.
--Severian the Lame

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