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MX - Lot of 43 Mixed Fragmented, Damaged or Low Grade Colonial Currency Notes.. ... (Total: 43 notes)
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Sold on May 31, 2017 for:
$1,292.50
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Description
MX - Lot of 43 Mixed Fragmented, Damaged or Low Grade Colonial Currency Notes.A mixture of notes from several colonies. Difficult to assign grades to many, some not fully identifiable. Despite condition however, the group is excellent for study and there are some rare notes included. DE Franklin notes (2, but not identifiable to series), DE-78; MD-54 (14), MD-55; NJ-95, 156, and 177 (2); NC-198a; PA-82, 110, 118, 132, 137, 138, 139 (6), 140 (3), 153, 154, 163; SC-97.1 (and very rare, laminated on plastic) and 116 (bottom half, note the "5s" in bottom left corner). Must be seen.
Ex: Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society. (Total: 43 notes)
Auction Info
Selections from the Eric P. Newman Collection Part 4 Internet Currency Auction #141790 (go to Auction Home page)
Auction Dates
May, 2017
31st
Wednesday
Internet/Mail Bids: 14
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 259
Buyer's Premium per Lot:
17.5% of the successful bid per lot.
Truth Seeker: The Life of Eric P. Newman (softcover)
A powerful and intimidating dealer of the 1960s, backed by important colleagues, was accused of selling fraudulent gold coins and ingots to unsuspecting numismatists. Who would go up against a man like that and, over the course of decades, prove the fraud? Who would expose a widely respected scholar as a thief, then doggedly pursue recovery of coins that the scholar had stolen from an embarrassed numismatic organization, all over the objections of influential collectors who had bought coins with clouded titles? Eric P. Newman would - and did. Reserve your copy today.
A powerful and intimidating dealer of the 1960s, backed by important colleagues, was accused of selling fraudulent gold coins and ingots to unsuspecting numismatists. Who would go up against a man like that and, over the course of decades, prove the fraud? Who would expose a widely respected scholar as a thief, then doggedly pursue recovery of coins that the scholar had stolen from an embarrassed numismatic organization, all over the objections of influential collectors who had bought coins with clouded titles? Eric P. Newman would - and did. Reserve your copy today.
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