1813 50C Overton 106a MS (PCGS#39466)
August 2021 ANA U.S. Coins Auction
- 拍卖行
- Stack's Bowers
- 批号
- 4088
- 等级
- MS65+
- 价格
- 233,224
- 详细说明
- Exquisitely Toned Gem 1813 Overton-106a Half Dollar
An Historic Issue
1813 Capped Bust Half Dollar. O-106a. Rarity-3. MS-65+ (PCGS). CAC.
Impressive cartwheel luster spins over exquisitely blended pastel-toned surfaces, with gray centers revealing understated violet and gold highlights, ringed with concentric arcs of blue and champagne gold on the obverse, while the reverse displays bolder azure at the peripheries. A premium Gem example, this half dollar is an aesthetic treat whose preservation exceeds that of more typical specimens in this grade range. Concerted effort reveals a coin that approaches perfection, as befits the PCGS-assigned and CAC-verified MS-65+ grade. Insufficient metal flow has left an area of Liberty's bust and the reverse portion opposite it, near the letter D in UNITED, softly struck and containing some original planchet texture, as made. Sharply struck otherwise and ringed by a strong perimeter of denticles on both sides, the central devices stand out firmly from the pristine fields. A single die clash has left traces in front of Liberty's profile and behind her head, along with a retrograde impression of LIBERTY under the wing at right and an outline of Liberty's bust above it. The reverse die is lightly cracked through the olive leaves and the top of the denomination 50, while another crack begins at the rim below the olive leaves and joins the centers of UN to the bases of the letters ITED.
With its stunning quality and picturesque toning, this example spectacularly represents a year of great historic consequence for the United States. Mr. Madison's War, the War of 1812, entered full swing in 1813, with long-lasting effects on the American economy. While the frontier and border regions had to concern themselves with British-sponsored native incursions, and the coastal South began to suffer from the British blockade, certain industries in New England prospered, taking advantage of the opportunity to trade with both neutrals and the enemy. Northern manufactures kept the South supplied at high prices, as the South was unable to move its agricultural products anywhere but New England. All manner of specie poured into New England while the rest of the country went without, dependent largely upon paper money for local commerce. Many of the high grade half dollars of this era probably first found sanctuary in the vaults of Boston banks, and Gems like this may have remained there a half-century until the burgeoning numismatic marketplace placed a premium value upon them.
The Garrett-Pryor coin, sold as an uncertified MS-66 in 1996, has long been considered the standard-bearer for this variety, though if it has been submitted to PCGS at some point in the last 19 years (a likely but perhaps not certain scenario), it has not graded any finer than MS-65 or MS-65+. The only 1813 half dollar graded finer than this one at PCGS is the Newman Overton-107a in MS-67.
Provenance: From the Iron Eagle Collection. Ex our (Bowers and Merena's) ANA Sale of August 2003, lot 1431, via Stuart Levine; our sale of the D. Brent Pogue Collection, Part II, September 2015, lot 2015. Pogue Collection sale lot tag included.
PCGS Population (all die marriages of the issue): just 2; with a single MS-67 finer.
PCGS# 39466. NGC ID: 24EZ.
Click here for certification details from PCGS.
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