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Stack's To Auction 1830-S Vintage Coin Screw Press

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CCFPress's Avatar
United States
1420 Posts
 Posted 01/19/2011  10:24 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add CCFPress to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Stack's-To-Auction-1830-S-Vintage-Coin-Screw-Press
The following is a press release from Stack's

1830s Vintage Screw Press From Frontier, Deviercy & Co. An extraordinary offering of this 1830s style German or French screw coining press. Our consignor has done considerable research on this press and has discovered that this machine belonged to Eugene Deviercy along with Pierre Frontier, who formed a jewelry partnership in 1853 located in San Francisco. A few of their coins (almost certainly struck on this very press) were recovered on the shipwreck of the S. S. Winfield Scott which left the San Francisco port on December 1, 1853. The coins they produced had a 14k core of gold with copper, while they were coated with seven microns of 18K gold. Some of the California gold fractional coins produced by this firm have the initials "F.D." below Liberty's truncation, others were issued anonymously. It is believed Frontier and Deviercy also minted coins for other local jewels during these early days of the California Gold Rush.
Stack's-To-Auction-1830-S-Vintage-Coin-Screw-Press
Mechanically this screw type press is operated by a long hand thrown centrifugal rod at the top, which causes a thick 2" screw to be pressed down. As the screw presses down it pushes on a square shaped length of iron that moves up and down and imposes considerable force on the hammer die which is mounted at its base. An ingenious feature is the square shape of the iron driving rod, this mitigates the rotational force from the screw action that would otherwise torque the hammer die and cause uneven striking. The direction of the hammer die is straight downward where it meets the planchet that is held in place by a collar and supported on the lower die, thus striking the impression into the planchet to create a coin. In terms of originality the wooden base may be original, and appears to be of solid oak, with many scrapes and fissures the base was likely in use for many years. The all important mechanism of the arched iron or steel press itself appears original, with the screw intact and the seat for holding the hammer die is attached. No base to hold the anvil die is present, and the swinging arm that drives the press was recently replaced and machined to properly fit the tapered driving nut on top of the press. The mechanism measures about 22" high by 15" wide and sits securely on the oak base. The oak base is 14" wide by 12" deep and about 30" high. The base is easily separated from the press, but both are quite heavy.

This coining press stayed with the evolving firm of Frontier, Deviercy & Co., or was stored until the late 1880s when a San Francisco Mint employee purchased it. The press was transferred to Philadelphia in the early 1900s at a time when such items were illegal to own privately due to their use in manufacturing counterfeit coins. This press next surfaced again in the 1970s when it was offered in a Philadelphia Municipal surplus auction. The press apparently did not sell and it ended up in New Jersey State Museum where it was later sold and eventually purchased by our consignor. Related documents and early photographs obtained by our consignor through an unrelated transaction helped piece together the provenance of this rare coining press and these will be provided to the purchaser.
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Conder101's Avatar
United States
17884 Posts
 Posted 01/19/2011  1:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Interesting. It's a screw press, but I'm not convinced it is a coining press.
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tampabaygrampa's Avatar
United States
408 Posts
 Posted 01/19/2011  6:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tampabaygrampa to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Wouldn't it be great if the dies were with it.
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vermontensium's Avatar
United States
16679 Posts
 Posted 01/19/2011  7:11 pm  Show Profile   Check vermontensium's eBay Listings Check vermontensium's eCrater Listings Bookmark this reply Add vermontensium to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Pretty neat piece of Western frontier history.
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