1907 $20 High Relief, Wire Edge MS (PCGS#9135)
Spring 2023 U.S. Coins Auction
- 拍卖行
- Stack's Bowers
- 批号
- 3274
- 等级
- MS64+
- 价格
- 338,992
- 详细说明
- Enticing Near-Gem High Relief Saint-Gaudens $20
MCMVII (1907) Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle. High Relief. Wire Rim. MS-64+ (PCGS). CAC.
A beautiful coin in all regards, and an outstanding example of this iconic 20th century gold design. Lustrous and frosty, the surfaces are further enhanced by a full endowment of vivid orange-gold color. The strike is impressively sharp for the issue, the surfaces carefully preserved and temptingly close to full Gem Uncirculated quality.
The High Relief Saint-Gaudens double eagle is one of those coins that appear on most numismatists wish lists even if 20th century American gold is not a chosen field of study. The image of Liberty striding towards the viewer holding a torch and olive branch is one of the most familiar coin motifs and is recognizable by even those with the most casual interest in coins.
The story of this coin's creation and the partnership between president and sculptor adds to the appeal of the novel design. In 1905, President Teddy Roosevelt, arguably the president who took the most active and personal interest in our coinage designs, was sadly disappointed with the mediocre appearance of America's coinage designs of the era. The president had only recently taken an interest in ancient Greek coins, having seen some on display, and he vocally lamented the fact that the coinage of his era was plain and uninspired in comparison to those ancient works of numismatic art. Accordingly, Roosevelt contracted with his long time acquaintance, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, paying the sum of $5,000 to him to redesign the entire U.S. coinage spectrum, from the small bronze cent all the way up to the large gold double eagle. Saint-Gaudens, America's most admired sculptor, kept his studio and family home in Cornish, New Hampshire, where he prepared the many sketches and working models for his ideas.
By the summer of 1907, Saint-Gaudens had nearly completed the work on the Indian $10 design as well as the new $20 design (which was based on his statue of Victory, part of the Sherman Victory Monument in New York City's Central Park). On August 3, 1907, Saint-Gaudens succumbed to cancer without having seen an example of his work in its legal tender form; his stunning design was finished by his assistant, Henry Hering. Meanwhile, a great "war" of words and bombast (Roosevelt called it his "pet crime") had broken out between the Mint and Chief Engraver Charles Barber on one side, and President Roosevelt, on the other. Barber was gravely upset that Roosevelt had unkind words for his dime, quarter, and half dollar designs (which had circulated as current coin of the realm since 1892), and he was also incensed over the fact that an outside artist had been chosen to redesign our country's coinage. Further, Barber protested that the high relief of the dies would prevent the coins from striking, stacking at banks, and on and on, causing Roosevelt to state that the MCMVII $20 coins would be produced if it took all day to strike just one coin!
Despite Barber's shenanigans, the MCMVII High Relief double eagles were eventually struck to the tune of several hundred pieces a day, though not without difficulties - each coin needed three blows from the dies to be rendered to its full design advantage. Some 12,867 High Relief MCMVII double eagles were produced to the president's satisfaction. Of those, at least two-thirds are of the Wire Rim variety. The Wire Rim was actually not intended as part of the overall design but rather was an artifact of the striking process. During striking, if the collar was not sufficiently tightened, metal would be pushed to where the coin's edge and collar meet. Even the slightest misalignment of the obverse and reverse dies would force metal into the gap, forming the fin (as the Mint referred to this feature). A second collar was employed that largely eliminated the Wire Rim, resulting in the scarcer Flat Rim variety, but the slow nature of the minting process eventually necessitated a reworking of the entire design to reduce the relief. Barber eventually redesigned the dies, making them flatter in depth and considerably less dynamic in appearance, and swapping the Roman numerals for Arabic. This style would continue through the demise of the series in 1933.
As these were appreciated in their own time and many were saved, we estimate that perhaps 6,000 coins are known for both varieties of the 1907 High Relief double eagle combined, or about half the mintage. Premium quality examples, such as this near-Gem certified by PCGS and approved by CAC, enjoy particularly strong demand and are becomingly increasingly rare from a market availability standpoint.
PCGS# 9135. NGC ID: 26F2.
Click here for certification details from PCGS.
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