1921 $20 MS (PCGS#9172)
August 2020 U.S. Coins Auction
- 拍卖行
- Stack's Bowers
- 批号
- 1304
- 等级
- MS63
- 价格
- 1,333,832
- 详细说明
- Choice Mint State 1921 Saint-Gaudens $20
A Key Condition Rarity
1921 Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle. MS-63 (PCGS).
A stunning and original example of this legendary 20th century rarity. The warm golden-wheat surfaces are dusted in peach-colored patina that is most prominent on the reverse. A satiny complexion shimmers throughout the fields, remaining nicely untroubled in-hand. The devices are sharp and boast a more frosty texture. A trivial bagmark in the upper right obverse field serves as a convenient pedigree marker for tracing this through future cabinets. Among the finest examples known, just 9 coins have been graded finer by PCGS.
The mintage figures for several double eagle issues produced in the 1920s and 1930s mask their rarity today. During the financial crises that resulted from World War I, most double eagles did not circulate domestically but were rather used for international trade, principally to Europe. Demand for double eagles for export soared in the years following the Great War, which resulted in higher production numbers throughout the 1920s. Bags of newly minted Saint-Gaudens double eagles sat in bank and government vaults or were used in prearranged specie payments to foreign banks. Fortunately, some enterprising and well-connected numismatists managed to obtain issues through back channels via bankers and Treasury officials that otherwise would not have entered circulation. This all changed on April 5, 1933 when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed Executive Order 6102 requiring the surrender of all but a desultory amount of gold coin, bullion, and gold certificates in an effort to prevent hoarding. This order was later superseded by Executive Order 6260 signed on August 28, 1933 which included export prohibitions, effectively ceasing the flow of gold out of the country. The double eagles still in government and bank hands ended up in Treasury melting pots, cast into ingots and transferred to gold reserves. In the process, the vast majority of the Saint-Gaudens double eagles struck in the 1920s and 1930s ended up in government smelters with no regard for date or mintmark.
The 1921 double eagle was the only gold denomination struck that year and then only at the Philadelphia Mint. A few were paid out domestically and as specie payments to Europe following the Great War, but the substantial bulk remained at the Mint. The 1921 double eagle is one such issue that mostly ended up in the melts of the 1930s leaving an estimated 150 coins behind, half of which are in circulated grade levels. When David Akers wrote about this issue, he called it "the premier condition rarity of the Saint-Gaudens series." As one of the most desired twentieth century gold rarities, we are excited to offer such a stunning specimen, and look forward to seeing it cross the block.
Provenance: From the Dr. James A. Ferrendelli Collection.
PCGS Population: 9; 9 finer.
PCGS# 9172. NGC ID: 26G2.
Click here for certification details from PCGS.
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