Prototype of first US dollar coins to go under the hammer, expected to fetch over $350K at auction

Known as the 'No Stars Flowing Hair Dollar', it gets its name because it is missing stars.

AP
Known as a pattern, the front features the flowing hair portrait of Liberty and the date 1794, while the reverse side shows a small eagle on a rock within a wreath.
A piece of copper that was struck by the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia in 1794 and was a prototype for the fledgling nation's money will go up for auction Friday.

Businessman and Texas Rangers co-chairman Bob Simpson owns the item, which is known as the "No Stars Flowing Hair Dollar."

While it closely resembles silver dollars that were later minted in Philadelphia, it gets its name because it is missing stars.


"While subsequent dollar coins struck featuring stars were added to the front of the coin, starless coins are considered by collectors and institutions as one-of-a-kind prototypes for the silver examples that would follow," said Jacob Lipson of Heritage Auctions.

Heritage Auctions estimates the prototype will sell for between $350,000 and $500,000 when it goes on the block online in Dallas on Friday.

Known as a pattern, the front features the flowing hair portrait of Liberty and the date 1794, while the reverse side shows a small eagle on a rock within a wreath. Similar starless examples are part of the Smithsonian Institution's National Numismatic Collection.
ADVERTISEMENT

"It's incredibly exciting," said California-based numismatist David McCarthy. "It gives us a view into what was going on inside the Mint in 1794 when it was gearing up to make the first dollars ever struck."

The pattern was forgotten as the Mint continued the process of creating the nation's first silver dollars.

"Coin collecting lore states the unique rarity was excavated from the site of the first Philadelphia Mint before 1876," Lipson said. That was how the coin's first owner described its history at its first auction appearance in 1890.

The pattern is corroded and not in perfect condition, Lipson said, likely because it was buried at the site of the original Mint. There are some scratches and other marks on its brown surfaces.
ADVERTISEMENT

It has traded hands eight times, according to the auction house.

Simpson, 73, purchased it along with other patterns in 2008 to add to his large collection. He views himself as a steward and thinks it is time for someone else to enjoy it.
ADVERTISEMENT

"I think coins should be appreciated almost as artwork," he said. "I have gotten more than enough joy from them."

Simpson said he wasn't wealthy when he started collecting. As a boy, he said he would go to a bank, get a roll of coins and examine them. It was part of the fun he said he has had in this country.

"America is the only place I think where you can travel from near poverty to wealth based on education," he said.
From 'Pink' Diamond To The World's First Microchip: Items That Failed To Sell At Auctions
1/5
In 2016, Sotheby's had a manuscript by Ludwig van Beethoven up for auction. The single-page manuscript was described as the "Autograph manuscript of the 'Allegretto' in B minor for string quartet (WoO 210), composed for an English visitor to Vienna in 1817". It has the words "composed and written by Beethoven himself November 29, 1817 at Vienna" inscribed on it. The manuscript was expected to fetch about 200,000 pounds. The auction house made a statement that there were no takers because of a Beethoven scholar's claim that the manuscript was not authentic.

Image: Sotheby's
In 2016, Sotheby's had a manuscript by Ludwig van Beethoven up for auction. The single-page manuscript was described as the "Autograph manuscript of the 'Allegretto' in B minor for string quartet (Wo..
Read More
In 1996, Albert Einstein's earliest available manuscript in which he elaborated on his theory of relativity was auctioned by Sotheby's in Manhattan. The item, which was expected to sell for $4 million-6 million, failed to meet the minimum bid. The 72-page untitled manuscript was written in 1912, seven years after Einstein's special theory was first published.
In 1996, Albert Einstein's earliest available manuscript in which he elaborated on his theory of relativity was auctioned by Sotheby's in Manhattan. The item, which was expected to sell for $4 millio..
Read More
In 1958, Jack Kilby at Texas Instruments made the world's first microchip by hand. The second prototype of this historic chip went under the hammer in 2014, but failed to meet the reserve price. Kilby won the Nobel Prize for the creation of the microchip and his other contributions to the computing era. Christie's had estimated that the chip would bring in between $1-2 million.

Image: Christie's
In 1958, Jack Kilby at Texas Instruments made the world's first microchip by hand. The second prototype of this historic chip went under the hammer in 2014, but failed to meet the reserve price. Kilb..
Read More
Cook was a famous explorer and was the man who claimed Australia for Great Britain in 1770, naming eastern Australia 'New South Wales'. One of Cook's wai st coat s passed through a few hands, including Australian pianist Ruby Rich who altered it to suit a woman's body. It landed up in an auction in 2017. The 250-yearold waistcoat was valued close to $1.1 million by Aalders Auctions.

Photo: Aalders Auctions
Cook was a famous explorer and was the man who claimed Australia for Great Britain in 1770, naming eastern Australia 'New South Wales'. One of Cook's wai st coat s passed through a few hands, includi..
Read More
Father Jamie McLeod had bought an artwork from a small antique shop in Cheshire for £400. It later came to light that the artwork was an original Van Dyck painting. It was discovered after a television show evaluated the painting. In 2014, Christie's set an estimate of 400,000-500,000 pounds for the painting titled 'Head Study of a Man in a Ruff', which failed to sell.

Image: Christie's
Father Jamie McLeod had bought an artwork from a small antique shop in Cheshire for £400. It later came to light that the artwork was an original Van Dyck painting. It was discovered after a televisi..
Read More

Download
The Economic Times Business News App
for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
READ MORE
ADVERTISEMENT

READ MORE:

LOGIN & CLAIM

50 TIMESPOINTS

More from our Partners

Loading next story
Business News › Magazines › Panache › Prototype of first US dollar coins to go under the hammer, expected to fetch over $350K at auction
Text Size:AAA
Success
This article has been saved

*

+