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The E-Sylum: Volume 18, Number 21, May 24, 2015, Article 13

A POGUE, PART I POSTMORTEM

Charles Morgan of CoinWeek published a great postmortem on the Pogue, Part I sale on May 20, 2015. Here's an excerpt. Articles like these are invaluable for future collectors and researchers who wish to learn about the action on the auction floor where important coin rarities changed hands. -Editor

Pogue sale Part 1 auction floor

A light round of applause met the $2,000,000 hammer price that lot 1128–a rare 1808 quarter eagle–brought at Stack’s Bowers and Sotheby’s joint offering of the D. Brent Pogue Family Collection.

The coin, once part of Congressman Jimmy Hayes well-regarded type set, closed the door on the first of seven scheduled Pogue sales. It was one of three million-dollar-plus coins offered in an evening of remarkable early federal issues. Pogue’s 1796 Draped Bust quarter dollar (lot 1051 – a rare, high-grade first-year piece), brought $1,300,000 before the 17.5% buyer’s premium, and lot 1103–a 1797 Draped Bust half dollar, graded MS66 by PCGS–pulled in the same amount.

A stout price–and a shocking one, according to Kagin’s numismatist David McCarthy.

Before the clock struck 10:00 p.m., the evening’s festivities were over. Stack’s and Sotheby’s will return to the 1334 York Avenue auction floor tonight to offer a varied assortment of numismatic rarities, many remarkable in their own right. But the pent-up energy generated by the surprise announcement last year that Mack and Brent Pogue were bowing out has eased somewhat, though the collection’s headliners are yet to come.

The gallery was full of the usual suspects, including members of the New York numismatic scene and nationally-known dealers such as Laura Sperber and George Huang from Legend Numismatics, Doug Winter, Scott Travers, David McCarthy and Don Kagin from Kagin’s, Kevin Lipton and Harry Laibstain (to name but a few). Heritage Auctions sent representatives. And the Stack’s Bowers team was present in full force. Well, almost.

Of the company’s three scions, only two were present. Lawrence Stack worked the phones, while Q. David Bowers worked the crowd. Harvey Stack, unfortunately, had to watch the proceedings online, unable to attend due to a recent injury.

“My doctor said that I’m as good as new,” Harvey related to me via email. “But I watched the entire sale over the internet.” And that he did, summing up his opinion of the sale in another email to me just before midnight.

That Harvey Stack was able to watch the sale unfold through a live video feed from the comfort of his home speaks to the fundamental shift in the rare coin auction scene that’s taken place since the last time Stack’s Bowers and Sotheby’s teamed up in 2001 to sell the 1933 double eagle.

Auctions cast a much wider net of potential participants now as individual collectors can bid on items without the expense of travel or hiring a buying agent. While the floor was filled with interested spectators (the sale was a “happening”), there were far fewer paddle raisers in attendance. Much of the action was coming in over the phone or from online bidding.

Of course, there were exceptions.

David Quint bidding on the Pogue 1803 dime
David Quint bidding on the Pogue 1803 dime.

Collector David Quint rampaged through the Pogue dimes, his paddle raising with such frequency in the sale’s early going that his fellow collectors took note and a staff photographer from the New York Times took perch, training her lens on him in anticipation.

The 128-lot offering brought more than $25 million with buyer’s premium, which amounts to $195,312.50 per lot–a coin-by-coin record price. What’s amazing about this number is that 16 of the 128 coins sold for less than $20,000 (Trivia time: the lowest price realized of the night–about $4,994 with buyer’s premium–went to lot 1026, an 1834 Capped Bust half dime in PCGS MS66).

Brent Pogue and his family–including his father and co-collector Mack Pogue–were on hand for the sale. The family kept a low profile and watched the sale unfold from a private box overlooking the sales floor. Brent made a few brief appearances; once before the start of the sale, a second time during the bidding for lot 1103 and one last time at the end of the sale, when he was surrounded by well-wishers and Stack’s Bowers and Sotheby’s personnel.

D. Brent Pogue with Sotheby’s Auctioneer David Redden
D. Brent Pogue with Sotheby’s Auctioneer David Redden

To read the complete article, see:
Pogue, Part 1: Postmortem, Dealer Take-Aways, and the Sale as an “Event” (www.coinweek.com/coins/news/pogue-part-1-postmortem-dealer-take-aways-sale-event/)



Wayne Homren, Editor

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