1933 DOUBLE EAGLE MOVES UPTOWN TO NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The E-Sylum (8/18/2013)
Book Content
For 10 months, the worldâs most valuable coin sat wrapped in plastic on a folding chair in a little cagelike compartment behind a bright blue door at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It was only a step or two away from billions of dollarsâ worth of neatly stacked bars of gold bullion.
On Monday, a man in a dark suit stashed the coin in his briefcase and coolly walked out of the Fedâs heavily guarded limestone-and-sandstone building, a couple of blocks from the New York Stock Exchange in Lower Manhattan. He nodded politely to the guards on the front steps of the Fed. They did not stop him.
The man with the briefcase, David N. Redden, an auction-house executive, was not pulling off a heist. He was taking the coin on a 6.7-mile ride to the New-York Historical Society on Central Park West.
âItâs history,â Louise Mirrer, the president of the historical society, said of the coin after Mr. Redden had turned it over to curators who fitted it into a display case. âWe have lots of priceless objects, but itâs always exciting to have the most valuable anything.â
The coin is valuable â Mr. Redden auctioned it at Sothebyâs for $7,590,020 in 2002, at the time the highest price any coin has ever sold for â because it should not exist. That is why it has inspired four books, a documentary for the Smithsonian Channel and an episode of the cable-television drama âThe Closer.â
Known to coin collectors as a double eagle because it was worth twice as much as a $10 eagle gold piece, it was struck in 1933, the year in which President Franklin D. Roosevelt took the United States off the gold standard. He also ordered that yearâs run of $20 pieces destroyed, except for two that were earmarked for the Smithsonian Institution.
The double eagle that Mr. Redden put in his briefcase somehow escaped that fate. It apparently made its way to Egypt and back, and was seized by the Secret Service in a sting operation at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in 1996.
âFor collectors,â he said as the S.U.V. barreled up the West Side Highway, âitâs almost a mystical experience to look at it.â He said this while looking at an almost identical double eagle, one from 1923 that did not have to be destroyed because it had been in circulation. He carries that coin with him everywhere, the way other people carry their cellphones. (He has one of those, too.)
One element of the back story, he said, is the current owner, who has never been identified. âItâs one of the wonderful mysteries of coin collecting, who bought that coin,â Mr. Roach said.
Mr. Redden described the owner as âa fabulous collector who was completely captivated by the story of the coin,â but not a coin collector.
âAfter he bought it, he said, âI donât want to take it home, I donât want to put it in a bank vault â what should I do with it?ââ Mr. Redden recalled. âI said the Fed is planning a show. It was the star of that show for years.â
But last fall, the Fed sent the coin off to the vault. âThe owner is interested in letting the public see it,â Mr. Redden said. The historical society beckoned, and the two security men followed Mr. Redden from the S.U.V. through the societyâs back door. They watched as exhibition designers polished its case and tested the alarm, just in case.
âI donât know what the threat level on this particular item is, because if they steal it, whoâs going to buy it?â one of the security men, Louis Guiliano, said. âIf you canât fence the coin, itâs not valuable. Itâs only valuable if you can get someone to pay you.â
To read the complete article, see: A Coin Is Historic, Priceless and No Longer in a Vault (cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/a-coin-is-historic-priceless-and-no-longer-in-a-vault/)
To read some earlier E-Sylum articles, see:
DAVID LANGE ON SECURITY FOR THE ANA'S COIN RARITIES (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v16n32a07.html)
THE NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY: RESPECT THE HYPHEN! (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v15n23a13.html)