
This is a two part column talking about auction pedigrees (Part I) with a focus on the Mickley-Hawn-Queller 1804 silver dollar and the Anderson-Dupont-Yoder 1838-O half dollar. Part II tells the fascinating story of tracking down a footnote - a price realized 20 years ago - on a pedigreed piece highlighted in my new book, "Profitable Coin Collecting," which Krause will publish July 20. Rare coins are white hot. On April 17, Heritage sold the David Queller family specimen of the 1804 silver dollar for $3.7 million, and the Yoder family 1838-O half dollar (a circulated proof-45) for $276,000. Both coins and all others quoted refer to the hammer price plus the buyer's premium, if any, charged winning bidders.
Both pieces realized prove the state of the market when looked at in the context of the lengthy pedigree that each offers. The 1804 dollar goes back 140 years; the 1838-O half dollar covers a half century of the coin market with its ups, downs, and sideways momentum.
For more than 40 years, I've been writing about the rare coin market and auction sale trends, and have charted the path that I called in one book "planning your rare coin retirement." It's become more important to me as I get nearer to my own; my 57th birthday (coincidentally my 43rd year as a coin writer) comes up July 28.
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