typeset - CAC 的钱币相册
CAC, R-2. "Accessory E" variety: mispunched "E" in the wreath below the E of STATES. The lower left serif protrudes from the wreath just above the point of the A in HALF.
CAC, R3. Interesting provenance: owned by Henry C. Hines (1856-1946), a graduate of Columbia Law School who lost the equivalent of $24M (today’s dollars) in 1929 but revered as “one of the Big 3 of Big Cents”. In 1939, he sold this piece to M. H. Bolender, "The United States Early Silver Dollars from 1794 to 1803" author. This coin then passed to Jules Reiver, who was awarded a Bronze Star for his part in the Battle of the Bulge in WW2 and “ranked among the greatest numismatists of the Twentieth Century,” then to Jon Alan Boka's collection of 1794 cent varieties in 2006, the collection of Colonel Stephen Ellsworth, current ANA president of course, in 2009 and Lou Alfonso in 2013.
CAC, R3. Interesting provenance: owned by Henry C. Hines (1856-1946), a graduate of Columbia Law School who lost the equivalent of $24M (today’s dollars) in 1929 but revered as “one of the Big 3 of Big Cents”. In 1939, he sold this piece to M. H. Bolender, "The United States Early Silver Dollars from 1794 to 1803" author. This coin then passed to Jules Reiver, who was awarded a Bronze Star for his part in the Battle of the Bulge in WW2 and “ranked among the greatest numismatists of the Twentieth Century,” then to Jon Alan Boka's collection of 1794 cent varieties in 2006, the collection of Colonel Stephen Ellsworth, current ANA president of course, in 2009 and Lou Alfonso in 2013.
CAC, R3. Interesting provenance: owned by Henry C. Hines (1856-1946), a graduate of Columbia Law School who lost the equivalent of $24M (today’s dollars) in 1929 but revered as “one of the Big 3 of Big Cents”. In 1939, he sold this piece to M. H. Bolender, "The United States Early Silver Dollars from 1794 to 1803" author. This coin then passed to Jules Reiver, who was awarded a Bronze Star for his part in the Battle of the Bulge in WW2 and “ranked among the greatest numismatists of the Twentieth Century,” then to Jon Alan Boka's collection of 1794 cent varieties in 2006, the collection of Colonel Stephen Ellsworth, current ANA president of course, in 2009 and Lou Alfonso in 2013.
CAC, S-252 R2. Ex. The Lou Alfonso Collection. Breen die state V, showing die cracks on both sides and die clashmarks from the obverse bust on the reverse especially between the S and O.
CAC, S-252 R2. Ex. The Lou Alfonso Collection. Breen die state V, showing die cracks on both sides and die clashmarks from the obverse bust on the reverse especially between the S and O.
CAC, Obverse of 1856, FS-401B, Snow-2. Believed to be produced from leftover 1856 dies and among the first circulation strikes.
CAC ex. BASH Collection. B-1 FS-901 Late Die State O/F Reverse. Stacks & Bowers description: "Sharply defined overall with plenty of softly frosted luster blending with handsome olive-grey and champagne-gold toning".
CAC ex. BASH Collection. B-1 FS-901 Late Die State O/F Reverse. Stacks & Bowers description: "Sharply defined overall with plenty of softly frosted luster blending with handsome olive-grey and champagne-gold toning".
CAC Doubled Die Reverse. Large S, blunt tail to R of DOLLAR: Breen-5811. Upturned serif of R broken off; mintmark "leans crazily to left"; normal periods. (from Q. David Bowers "Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States - A Complete Encyclopedia")