1857-S $20 Spiked Shield S.S. Central America #2 (with Pinch) MS (PCGS#670713)
June 2023 U.S. Coins Auction
- 拍卖行
- Stack's Bowers
- 批号
- 2080
- 等级
- MS65
- 价格
- 93,223
- 详细说明
- Historic Gem 1857-S From the S.S. Central America Shipwreck
With Pinch of Gold Dust
1857-S Liberty Head Double Eagle. Variety-20A. Spiked Shield. S.S. Central America Label. With One Pinch of California Gold Dust. MS-65 (PCGS).
This historic shipwreck treasure remains one of the finest survivors of this San Francisco double eagle. It displays lovely apricot-gold color throughout. Fully struck with virtually pristine surfaces and subtle prooflike reflectivity in the fields, this coin would do justice to the finest gold type set or specialized cabinet of Liberty Head double eagles. This coin is housed in a special large size PCGS holder that also includes one pinch of California gold dust. The back of the PCGS insert features the signature of Bob Evans, chief scientist and historian of the S.S. Central Americatreasure. Under Evans' signature is the note: "I certify this coin and gold dust were recovered from the S.S. Central America."
The year 1857 saw two major events occur that had long lasting effects on the United States economy. Throughout the early 1850s, the railroads began a rapid expansion throughout the nation in an effort to unite major commercial centers and eventually the East Coast with the West Coast. In the process, railroad companies embarked on an overly ambitious construction spree which required considerable financing, which banks were eager to provide. It became apparent that many of these railroad companies were built on empty promises and no assets. The bubble in railroad stocks burst in the summer of 1857. beginning a bear market that accelerated rapidly after several major companies failed. On August 24, the dam broke when the Ohio Life Insurance & Trust Company collapsed entirely. That failure precipitated a massive run on the banks that when the dust settled left in ruin thousands of banks, businesses reliant on those banks, and the people reliant on those businesses.
While this financial disaster, the Panic of 1857 unfolded across the nation, another tragedy exacerbated the economic failures and claimed hundreds of lives. On September 3, the S.S. Central America, a side-wheel steamer operated by the United States Mail Steamship Company, left the Panamanian port city of Colón with 101 crew members and 477 passengers headed to New York via Havana. On the 9th, the Central Americaencountered an Atlantic hurricane off the coast of North Carolina and tried to ride out the storm. Despite valiant efforts by Captain William Herndon and the passengers and crew to keep the ship from sinking, it was to no avail. On the 12th when two small vessels were spotted, Captain Herndon gave the order to abandon ship, deployed lifeboats and tried to rescue as many people as possible, with women and children first. That evening, the Central America slipped beneath the waves with Captain Herndon maintaining his position on the wheel box until the very end. Captain Herndon was celebrated across the nation for his bravery and heroism and his name lives on today in the form of memorials, ships, and the town of Herndon, Virginia.
Also on board the Central Americawas a staggering 15 tons of gold in the form of assayer ingots, gold dust, and coins worth $8 million at the time, or roughly half a billion dollars in today's accounting. The ship was lost over a particularly deep part of the Atlantic that made recovery an impossibility for generations. In the 1980s a group of treasure hunters and explorers believed they had located where the ship and its gold had come to rest on the ocean bottom. After years of exploration and searching with side-scan sonar and remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), the wreck was located in 1988, and over the next several years, several tons of gold assayer ingots, gold dust, and gold coins were recovered. Over the next several years the disposition of the treasure was litigated until it was determined that the discovery team was entitled to 92% of the recovered treasure.
Among the recovered items were approximately 5,400 freshly struck 1857-S double eagles. Typically, gold coins struck at the San Francisco Mint had entered the region's commercial channels and remained there. Before the recovery of the Central Americacoins, the best Type I double eagles struck at the San Francisco Mint would be in the AU range. Thanks to the recovery of this treasure ship and others, numismatists can now acquire not only a Mint State example, but even a Gem such as this. The majority of the double eagles recovered from the S.S. Central Americaare at the Choice Mint State level of preservation. Above those grades the numbers thin out and Gems are much more difficult to find. Due to careful conservation under the eye of scientist and discoverer Bob Evans, the surfaces of these coins are often as sparkling as the day they left the San Francisco Mint. This Gem will attract considerable attention from double eagle specialists, as well as enthusiasts of Gold Rush history and shipwreck lore.
Provenance: Ex S.S. Central America.
PCGS# 670713. NGC ID: 2696.
Click here for certification details from PCGS.
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