PREV ARTICLE
NEXT ARTICLE
FULL ISSUE
PREV FULL ISSUE
V8 2005 INDEX
E-SYLUM ARCHIVE
The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 27, July 3, 2005, Article 7 JUNE WAS A GREAT MONTH FOR DONALD SCARINCI Dick Johnson writes: "Not only was New Jersey numismatist, attorney and E-Sylum subscriber Donald Scarinci named to the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee this June, but his book on one of the framers of the U.S. Constitution was published in June as well. Numismatic News in its June 14, 2005 issue carried the story of Scarinci#39;s CCAC nomination by a California Senator and appointment approval by U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow. Scarinci joins ten other members of the citizens#39; committee to advise both the Treasury and U.S. Mint on the concept and suitability of our country#39;s coin and medal designs. Congress recommends four of the committee#39;s members, the Treasury names the remaining seven. A 20-year collector whose initial numismatic interests were in America#39;s Colonial and early American era coins, Scarinci five years ago turned to art medals in a big way for the medallic beauty they contain. He has developed a keen eye and insight into what makes good design and great medallic art -- ideal for the work he must do on the citizens advisory committee. He has collected examples of great medallic art of the past plus the works of living American artists, as well as overseas art medalists. He has attended the last two FIDEM conventions of world art medalists in Europe and exhibitions in this country of the American medallic sculptors#39; group, AMSA. For 18 months Scarinci has been deep into another research project, this one on America#39;s most famed art medal series, The Society of Medalists. He is planning a comprehensive work on the fine art medal series as his next book project. Already he has interviewed the majority of living artists who had created Society issues and five officials of the Medallic Art Company which struck the art medal series over a 75-year period, 1930-1995. Last Monday, June 27th, New Jersey Media columnist Herb Jackson wrote in his column "Capital Games" about Scarinci#39;s new book. It#39;s about someone you have never heard of, David Brearley, Jackson notes. Brearley just happened to be a Colonial jurist, a chief justice on the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1779 and one of the framers of the U.S. Constitution. Sorry he is so obscure. Perhaps that is one reason Don wrote about him –– he wants to change that. Don served as legal councel to the governor#39;s transition team in 2002. The transition office in Trenton was across the street from the New Jersey State Archives. Don#39;s searching there discovered a cache of letters and documents about Brearley, including such issues of modern-day importance as how much power the president should have versus Congress to appoint judges, government ministers and ambassadors. Brearley headed a constitutional committee, Don relates in the book, "David Brearley and the Making of the United States Constitution." just one of its accomplishments was the creation of the electoral college. This effects us 212 years later, columnist Jackson points out, in how a president could lose the popular vote and still win a presidential election (a la, George W. Bush in 2000). "There is an interesting numismatic hook to David Brearley," Don told me recently. "He was a signer on New Jersey Colonial notes of 1780 and 1781. The John Ford example of the extremely rare uncut sheet of notes of 1780 from New Jersey is now in my collection." Scarinci is senior partner in Scarinci & Hollenbeck, a law firm in Lyndhurst, New Jersey, which has over four dozen lawyers on its staff and is councel to 50 New Jersey municipalities and government agencies. The growing firm recently moved to Lyndhurst for larger quarters from its previous offices in Secaucus. Read Herb Jackson#39;s article on Don#39;s new book even if you are not a lawyer. You just might want to read the book! You will find the article at: Full Story Wayne Homren, Editor The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org. To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@coinlibrary.com To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum | |
PREV ARTICLE
NEXT ARTICLE
FULL ISSUE
PREV FULL ISSUE
V8 2005 INDEX
E-SYLUM ARCHIVE