A gem example of the famous 1796 No Stars quarter eagle, graded MS-65 (PCGS)
made history
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1796
Breen-1. Rarity-5. No Stars. MS-65 (PCGS).
A fabulous gem example of the famous 1796 No Stars quarter eagle,
graded MS-65 (PCGS), and considered comfortably the finest known example
made history as the 17th U.S. Coin to cross the $1,000,000 mark at
public auction when it sold for an impressive $1,380,000!
Bright yellow gold with a slight greenish tint and abundant frosty
lustre, more than we have ever seen on a specimen of this type. The
obverse shows resplendent cartwheel, satiny and neatly swirling over the
fields, and some light reflectivity. The reverse shows both deep
reflectivity and bold cartwheel lustre. In 1964, this coin was described
by Stack's in the Ward Collection sale as "a gem coin ...full frosty
mint lustre ... as sharp a specimen as we have ever handled or seen ...
This coin is the highlight of the U.S. section of this fine collection."
Some very light inherent roughness at the right obverse rim was present
at the moment of striking, and an area of adjustment marks is present at
the right reverse rim at the tops of AMER, affecting nothing but those
letters and the nearby wingtip. The reverse fields are nearly pristine,
apparently described as "equal to a brilliant proof" by B. Max Mehl in
1950 (see note below). The obverse shows some light scattered marks and
evidence of handling, none individually severe, with a natural circular
planchet depression off Liberty's forecurl serving as the best
identifier and a speck below R of LIBERTY noted for accuracy. A fine die
crack may be seen from the obverse rim at 9:00 northeast into the middle
of the left obverse field, and another die crack joins the bases of BER
of LIBERTY. The lowest curls are nearly intact, indicating a middle
stage of the lapping that progressively removes most of the lowest curl
(as with the Bass II coin). These die state aspects show better on this
coin than any we have seen.
The 1796 No Stars quarter eagle stands alone as a one year type and
the earliest issue of this long-lived denomination. It is a classic in
any grade, with tooled Fine or VF coins seeing competitive bidding from
legions of type collectors. In grades above EF, the coin stands as a
significant rarity—just 963 were struck, and perhaps 80 to 100 pieces
exist in all grades. PCGS has offered a Mint State grade only five
times: two as MS-61, two as MS-62, and this one all alone at a higher
grade. NGC has graded precisely one coin higher than MS-63, a MS-65
specimen like this one and perhaps even the identical coin. It is easy
to say this is the finest we have ever offered for auction, better than
the marvelous MS-62 Oliver Jung coin that sold for $345,000 one year
ago. It is probably also the finest we have seen, better even than the
two nice coins retained by the Harry Bass Foundation. Indeed, it seems
more than likely that this is the single finest example to have
survived, as it is three points better than anything else PCGS has seen
in over 20 years and one of only eight Uncirculated coins recorded by
Akers (a number that almost certainly includes duplication). In
discussing this precise coin on page 84 of The 100 Greatest U.S. Coins,
Ron Guth and Jeff Garrett noted:
"In 1995, the finest known 1796 'No Stars' Quarter Eagle was sold in
a New York auction. After fierce bidding, the coin was hammered down for
$605,000. A good argument could be made proclaiming that coin as the
most desirable eighteenth-century gold coin. Not only is it rare but
also it is the only year this design was produced."
Connoisseurs of early American coins compete to own the very finest
pieces, adjudged on the basis of grade, eye appeal, strike, and
originality. This coin stands tall on all four aspects, perhaps most
importantly the last one. With such a significant percentage of
important early gold coins having undergone "improvements" in recent
years, coins such as this—coins that look the same now as they did 40
years ago, whose surfaces have not been altered in the attempt to raise
the grade a point and the price an increment—take on more substantial
importance. It occupies a special place of primacy as the very best
extant of the very first quarter eagle. Held privately for a decade,
this coin has been cherished by its most recent owner and will
undoubtedly become a centerpiece in the hands of its next steward as
well.
PCGS Population: 1; none finer. This is the only example of the issue
certified finer than MS-62 by PCGS.
Courtesy www.anrcoin.com
Perhaps from New York Coin and Stamp Co.'s sale of
the Lorin Parmelee Collection, June 1890, Lot 719; Brock Collection;
University of Pennsylvania; Stack's sale of the Philip H. Ward, Jr.
Collection, May 1964, Lot 1660; Lelan Rogers; Stack's Numisma '95 sale,
November 1995, Lot 1498 (at $605,000).
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