Estimated price: 150,000€Poland / Gdańsk. 8 ducats, 1644. Extremely rare. About FDC.Berlin Auction Sale 41810
Estimated price: 100,000€HRE. Frederick of the Palatinate, 1619-1621. 10 ducats,
1620, Prague. Very rare. Very fine +.
Berlin Auction Sale 41823
Estimated price: 250,000€Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle. Christian, 1611-1633.
Gold löser of 20 ducats n.d. (1611-1633), Winsen (Luhe).
Probably unique. About extremely fine.
Berlin Auction Sale 41853
Estimated price: 100,000€Albrecht von Wallenstein. 10 ducats, 1631, Jičín. Very rare.
Extremely fine.
Berlin Auction Sale 41889
Estimated price: 50,000€German States / Prussia. Frederick William IV, 1840-1861.
Gold medal of 50 ducats, 1851 by F. W. Kullrich,
commemorating the completion of the equestrian statue of
Frederick the Great. Extremely rare. About FDC.
Berlin Auction Sale 418152
Estimated price: 75,000€Sweden. Gustav II Adolph, 1611-1632. 1631 gnadenpfennig.
From the collection of the Grand Duke of Oldenburg.
Berlin Auction Sale 41813
Estimated price: 100,000€German States / Charles V, 1519-1558. Silver medal, 1521,
by H. Krafft after a draft by Albrecht Dürer as a gift for the
Emperor on the occasion of the planned Imperial Diet in
Nuremberg. Extremely rare. Original strike. Extremely fine.
Berlin Auction Sale 418305
Estimated price: 125,000€France. Louis XV, 1715-1774. Pattern for the écu au bandeau,
1740, Paris. Very rare. NGC PF62 CAMEO. Proof.
Berlin Auction Sale 418458
Estimated price: 75,000€Russia. Nicholas I, 1825-1855. 1828 gold medal of 50 ducats
by V. Alexeev commemorating the peace with Persia.
Extremely rare. Extremely fine to FDC.
Berlin Auction Sale 418650
Estimated price: 175,000€Switzerland. Basel. 10 ducats, 1741, minted with the dies
of the half taler. Extremely rare. PCGS MS63PL.
Extremely fine to FDC.
Berlin Auction Sale 418671
All reviews

Newly Discovered Massachusetts Silver Threepence Brings $2.52 Million at Stack’s

Stack’s Bowers Galleries

November 2024 Showcase Auction

Coins

18 November 2024

US-Costa Mesa

A small silver coin about the size of a nickel, struck in Boston in 1652, set a world record in an auction conducted by Stack’s Bowers Galleries, the world leader in auctions of rare early American coins and currency. Selling for $2,520,000 (with all included fees), the piece surpassed the previous world record price of $646,250 for an American coin struck before the American Revolution by nearly $2 million. The 1652 Massachusetts threepence also set a record for any non-gold U.S. coin struck before the founding of the United States Mint. Weighing just 1.1 grams, its silver value is $1.03 based on today’s market.

 Lot 1103: Undated (1652) NE Threepence. Noe 1-A, Salmon 1-A, W-1. Rarity-8. EF-45 (PCGS). CMQ-X. Result: $2,520,000.

Lot 1103: Undated (1652) NE Threepence. Noe 1-A, Salmon 1-A, W-1. Rarity-8. EF-45 (PCGS). CMQ-X. Result: $2,520,000.

Struck within weeks of the establishment of the first mint to be opened in the future United States, the New England threepence is the only example known outside of a museum. A holed specimen has been in the collection of the Massachusetts Historical Society for 120 years. Since that time, no individual collector has had the opportunity to own an example. Today, several collectors pursued this once-in-several-lifetimes opportunity.

Stack’s Bowers Galleries Director of Numismatic Americana John Kraljevich, cataloger of the piece, noted after the sale that he was “very pleasantly shocked” at the price, which was more than three times in-house presale estimates. Stack’s Bowers Galleries’ auctioneer Ben Orooji called the 12-minute bidding battle “an exhilarating ride and a career highlight.”

All coinage from the Boston Mint is scarce. Silver threepences, sixpences, and shillings were struck in four different designs between 1652 and 1682, with the most famous and numerous of these being the Pine Tree shillings, struck over the last decade of the mint’s operation. The simple coins struck in 1652 are all extremely rare and feature just a tiny NE for New England and the denomination in pence (rendered as III, VI, or XII). Of the NE coins of 1652, the threepence is by far the rarest.

This piece was discovered in an old cabinet in Amsterdam around 2016 and belied identification for several years before the owner decided to thoroughly research his find. The coin is thought to have come from the Quincy Family of Boston, a political dynasty that included Abigail Adams, whose husband John was ambassador to the Netherlands in the 1770s and 1780s.

Lot 1102: Undated (1652) NE Shilling. Noe 3-B, Salmon 3-C, W-80. Rarity-7. AU-58 (NGC). Result: $192,000.

Lot 1102: Undated (1652) NE Shilling. Noe 3-B, Salmon 3-C, W-80. Rarity-7. AU-58 (NGC). Result: $192,000.

Lot 1015: “1781” (1783) Libertas Americana Medal. Original. Paris Mint. By Augustin Dupre. Betts-615, Adams-Bentley 15. Silver. Thick Planchet. MS-61 (PCGS). Result: $144,000.

Lot 1015: “1781” (1783) Libertas Americana Medal. Original. Paris Mint. By Augustin Dupre. Betts-615, Adams-Bentley 15. Silver. Thick Planchet. MS-61 (PCGS). Result: $144,000.

Lot 1023: “1781” (ca. 1789) Lieutenant Colonel William Washington, Battle of the Cowpens Medal. Original. Paris Mint. By Pierre Simon DuVivier. Betts-594, Adams-Bentley 11. Silver. AU-53 (PCGS). Result: $90,000.

Lot 1023: “1781” (ca. 1789) Lieutenant Colonel William Washington, Battle of the Cowpens Medal. Original. Paris Mint. By Pierre Simon DuVivier. Betts-594, Adams-Bentley 11. Silver. AU-53 (PCGS). Result: $90,000.

Two examples of the (1652) New England shilling were also sold in the same auction, bringing $60,000 and $192,000. Among other highlights, a silver Libertas Americana medal, struck in Paris in 1783 at Benjamin Franklin’s order as a commemorative of American independence, brought $144,000.

The sale of this New England threepence marks the 58th time Stack’s Bowers Galleries has sold a coin at auction for $1 million or more. Additional $1+ million collectibles sold by the firm include the 1936 Nobel Peace Prize medal and several rare pieces of paper money.