Wednesday, October 7, 2015

D. Brent Pogue II Sells For $26 Million

D. Brent Pogue Collection second auction by Stack’s Bowers Galleries and Sotheby’s brought $26,120,838, surpassing the highest pre-sale estimate of $20.6425 million. The 105 lots sold tonight brought an average of nearly a quarter of a million dollars per lot ($248,769), carried by four coins that exceeded the $1 million barrier.

Leading all lots was the famous “Lord St. Oswald” specimen of the 1794 dollar, graded MS-66+ (PCGS) and considered the finest circulation strike 1794 dollar in existence. Acquired by William Strickland in 1794-1795 and retained by his descendants until sold in London in 1964, it last sold in Stack’s 1985 sale of the Jimmy Hayes Collection for $242,000. It realized $4,993,750, more than 20 times what it realized 30 years ago.

1795 Eagle gold

Obtaining the second highest price was the finest known 1795 $10 in existence, graded MS-66+ (PCGS). Preserved in the Garrett Collection for nearly a century before it was sold by Johns Hopkins University in 1980, it more than doubled the high estimate of $1.2 million, receiving a final bid of $2,585,000 from a phone bidder. The Garrett-Pogue 1795 eagle is now the most valuable $10 coin ever sold at auction, the most valuable 18th century United States gold coin of any denomination, and the most valuable United States gold coin released for circulation.

Another 1795 eagle also passed the $1 million mark, realizing $1,057,500. The very rare 1795 9 Leaves eagle, graded MS-63+ (PCGS) and one of just 20 estimated survivors of the die variety, was estimated at $350,000 to $450,000. The finest example in private hands, the D. Brent Pogue coin opened at $280,000 and saw feverish bidding until the hammer fell beyond the $1 million threshold, receiving applause from the packed gallery.

Perhaps the biggest surprise of the evening was another rare gold coin variety, the finest known 1798 Small Eagle half eagle, graded AU-55 (PCGS). The King Farouk-D. Brent Pogue specimen, one of just six known, made headlines in 1912 when it sold in Henry Chapman’s George H. Earle, Jr. Collection sale for $3,000, a world record for any coin struck at the United States Mint. Estimated at $550,000 to $750,000, the coin opened at $650,000 and saw dramatically escalating bidding before setting a new world record for any 18th century half eagle at $1,175,000, more than double the previous record for a $5 coin of the 1790s.

Source: Stack's Bowers