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NGC Certifies Kendall 1861 Confederate Half Dollar PF-40

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bobby131313's Avatar
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 Posted 11/22/2014  12:26 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add bobby131313 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
NGC-Certifies-Kendall-1861-Confederate-Half-Dollar-PF-40
The following is a press release from NGC

The Kendall specimen of the Original 1861 Confederate States Half Dollar now sits atop the NGC Census as finest certified.

NGC-Certifies-Kendall-1861-Confederate-Half-Dollar-PF-40Numismatic Guaranty CorporationĀ® (NGCĀ®) has announced that it has recently graded one of the four extant original 1861 Confederate Half Dollars. Graded NGC PF 40, this important Confederate issue will be auctioned by Stack's Bowers Galleries in March 2015 as part of a collection sold to benefit the Henry P. Kendall Foundation.

Incredibly, NGC's certification of the Kendall specimen comes immediately upon the heels of NGC's announcement that it graded an original 1861 Confederate Half Dollar from the Donald G. Partrick Collection. The Partrick specimen, which is graded NGC PF 30, was acquired in October 2003 from the Stack's Bowers Galleries John J. Ford Collection sale.

"The 1861 Confederate Half Dollar is a spectacular rarity and examples are typically seen only once a generation, if that often," says Mark Salzberg, chairman of NGC. "For NGC to have been selected to certify both the Kendall and Partrick specimens in the span of a month is a humbling testament to the confidence in NGC's grading. Coins like these are the reason I have stayed a professional grader for nearly three decades."

Only two other original 1861 Confederate Half Dollars are known. One is in the museum of the American Numismatic Society, while the other is held by Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society.

"Stack's Bowers Galleries is honored that the Kendall specimen of the Original 1861 Confederate States Half Dollar now sits atop the NGC Census as finest certified. It's only appropriate that this piece was graded in Sarasota, the very town where Confederate Secretary of the Treasury Judah P. Benjamin fled Union troops on his way to exile in England," says Brian Kendrella, president of Stack's Bowers Galleries. "Stack's Bowers Galleries is the only auction house in the world to have auctioned an original Confederate half dollar, having sold the John J. Ford, Jr. specimen in 2003, and NGC is now the only grading service in the world to have ever authenticated one."

"Just as Stack's Bowers Galleries now becomes the only auction house to offer two different specimens of the four known, NGC can wear the same laurel among grading firms. We're delighted by this partnership and honored to handle this historic piece," he added.

The four original Confederate half dollars were struck at the New Orleans Mint in April 1861 on the order of C. G. Memminger, the Treasury Secretary of the Confederate States of America. A confiscated 1861 Seated Liberty die with prominent die cracks was used for the obverse, while a new die that featured a "Confederate States of America" legend was used for the reverse. Four proofs were struck and presented to Confederate dignitaries pending approval from Memminger, which never came.

The Kendall 1861 Confederate Half Dollar was originally presented to a professor of chemistry at the Medical College of Louisiana, who also served as a refiner at the New Orleans Mint. After trading hands several times over the next century, it was sold in 1971 by prominent dealer Lester Merkin to the coin's present owner.

For more information about the Kendall 1861 Confederate Half Dollar and to bid, visit the Stack's Bowers Galleries website, StacksBowers.com.
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Scropper's Avatar
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 Posted 11/25/2014  7:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Scropper to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks for sharing!
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scottk's Avatar
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 Posted 11/25/2014  8:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add scottk to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I bet that'll fetch a pretty penny.
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 Posted 11/25/2014  9:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Fuzzy317 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
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coinlover168's Avatar
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 Posted 11/25/2014  10:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add coinlover168 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I like the design of the shield. But no eagle?
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unholyroller's Avatar
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 Posted 11/26/2014  01:40 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add unholyroller to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Why would the Confederates put an eagle on it? That was by and large a Union symbol
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 Posted 11/26/2014  10:18 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The eagle is used by a LOT of countries,so there would be no reason for the Confederacy not to use it. And note what they DID use on their arms, a shield with red and white stripes and a blue chief. Same motif as the Union but with the addition of seven stars to the chief for the seven original seceding states. They also used the symbol of the Liberty Cap. Again a symbol used by the Union.


As far as I know, the four Confederate halves were not struck as proofs. The Union obverse die was not even a new one, it was on its second marriage and had even cracked.
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 Posted 11/27/2014  11:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jack jeckel to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I'm guessing the big money will come out for this one.

When was the last time 1 came to auction?
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MeadowviewCollector's Avatar
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 Posted 11/27/2014  11:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add MeadowviewCollector to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
When was the last time 1 came to auction?


2003 when the John J. Ford Collection was sold



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Scropper's Avatar
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 Posted 11/28/2014  2:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Scropper to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Conder, that's a good point. You'd think they would be graded Specimen. Breen calls them Proofs, but you'd think they were really to be considered patterns. According to the Red Book, they were struck on "normal" planchets. Interesting...
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 Posted 12/02/2014  06:33 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ambro51 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
These were made by hand using a very large screw press
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 Posted 12/02/2014  6:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Where'd they get the screw press? The no mint was using steam presses.
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TJsCoins's Avatar
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 Posted 12/02/2014  9:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TJsCoins to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Very cool!
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 Posted 03/29/2015  10:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jack jeckel to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Anyone know what this one and the one from the FUN show sold for?
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 Posted 03/30/2015  09:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SsuperDdave to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The PF30 at FUN hammered just over $880k and this one did not quite reach $650k (Heritage coin includes BP, this one does not).
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 Posted 04/01/2015  10:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jack jeckel to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Where'd they get the screw press? The no mint was using steam presses


According to this link "Four coins were struck (with a die crack on the obverse from the rim, past the seventh star, through the bridge of Liberty's nose, and under her chin) on a hand press"

I am no minting expert and welcome any inside as to the progression of press types over the ages of US coinage techniques.

http://107.21.32.92/index.php/seate...lars-1861-o/
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