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Landmark Mint State S-266c 1804 Cent, Finest Seen by PCGS

Ex Hines, Sheldon, Holmes


Sheldon Plate Coin


When you contemplate that
this 1804 cent, the rarest (by far) date among 19th century copper cents, is
Choice Mint State and is the finest seen by PCGS, you know that a special event
will be taking place!


And, indeed it will be—as
part of our D. Brent Pogue Collection Part V Sale to be held on Friday evening,
March 31, at the historic Evergreen Museum & Library in Baltimore. The
ancestral mansion of the Garrett family, made available to us by the Johns
Hopkins University, will see many rarities and other treasures cross the block.
Plan to be there in person. Alternative, on the Internet you can also “be
there” and take part of an even that will forever echo in the halls of
numismatics.


The possession of an 1804
cent in any high grade is an accomplishment. To obtain an Extremely Fine or,
better yet, About Uncirculated coin may take a long time. The Choice Mint State
coin in the D. Brent Pogue Collection is beyond incredible.


The 1804 cent has a rich
tradition. Ever since numismatics became a popular pursuit in the 1850s, the
1804 has been recognized as the most famous cent rarity of the 19th century. An
estimated 1,200 or so exist, hardly enough to supply the thousands of
collectors desiring to own one. Most are in lower grades such as Good, Very
Good, and Fine. Indeed, a Fine-12 1804 or a VF-20 is a desirable prize on its
own.


The published mintage of
756,838 is not relevant as most struck in this calendar year were from
earlier-dated dies. The original mintage of 1804-dated cents can only be
approximated, but possibly 50,000 to 60,000 would be in the ballpark in view of
the estimated 1,200-coin population, about a 2% survival rate.


In 1859 in his American
Numismatical Manual,
Dr. Montroville W. Dickeson noted that in circulation
one 1804 could be found for every 30 of 1805. He had been acquainted with cents
for quite some time and also wrote of finding 1793 cents for face value! This
particular book is the first “grand format” volume published on the coins of
our country. It came out in two later editions in 1860 and 1865, slightly
retitled as the American Numismatic Manual. Copies are readily available
from sellers of antiquarian books and make a great addition to a numismatic
library.


As is the rule, not the
exception, with coins in the D. Brent Pogue Collection, this 1804 has a
marvelous provenance:


Its first public
appearance that has been traced was in Thomas L. Elder’s sale of the William
T.R. Jester Collection, December 1914, lot 13. It could have appeared earlier,
but historic catalogs rarely had pictures, and grading varied widely. By 1914
Elder, who had been in New York City for a decade, was the leading dealer in
that metropolis.


From Elder it went to
Henry C. Hines, one of the best-known names in large cent lore—a collector par
excellence. The next owner was Dr. William H. Sheldon, a man of very complex
personality, remembered numismatically for his market-grading system published
in 1949 in Early American Cents. Today Sheldon grading numbers from 1 to
70 (originally intended for cents from 1793 to 1814) are used for just about
all coin series.


Later in the list of
owners and transactions are these names:  Numismatic Gallery’s (Abe Kosoff
and Abner Kreisberg) ANA Sale, August 1947, lot 882; Harold E. Whiteneck;
Copley Coin Company; Edmund A. Rice; Robert McAusland; Willard C. Blaisdell;
R.E. Naftzger, Jr.; W.M. ‘Jack’ Wadlington; Ira and Larry Goldberg’s sale of
the Dan Holmes Collection, September 2009, lot 531.


In Walter Breen’s
Encyclopedia of Early United States Cents, 1793-1814
this coin is No. 1 in
his Condition Census list. Ditto for William C. Noyes United States Large
Cents, 1793-1814
where it is also found as No. 1.



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