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The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 32, July 24, 2005, Article 10 MORE ON THE FORD RIDGEWAY MEDAL Alan V. Weinberg writes: "The gold Congressional medal awarded to General Matthew B. Ridgeway was auctioned as lot 263 in the Stack's John J. Ford Jr Sale # 7 on January 18, 2005. It opened at $5500 and hammered for $13,000 to collector Michael O'Shea of San Diego. To my recollection, Ford paid $10,000 for it years earlier. The medal 's original availability was extensively advertised in a half page ad , as I recall, in the Maine Antique Digest. I did not pursue it then as I felt it was "too modern" and apparently the current sale price also reflected this general feeling as similar "old" gold medals in the Ford collection have sold for tens of thousands of dollars more. I am amazed that a federally-funded institution or museum like the Smithsonian or West Point did not pursue the Ridgeway medal and allowed it to fall into private hands again." [The $10,000 figure is basically correct. The medal was actually auctioned twice - the original buyer at the first Ridgeway estate sale did not pay, and it was reauctioned later - that's when Ford learned of it and brought me in to bid for him. A local coin dealer was the underbidder the second time around. I don't know what the initial hammer price was, but it was less than $10,000. As another example of how Ford liked to hold his cards close to his vest, he asked me not to let on that I knew anything about numismatics when I went to the auction house to view and bid on the medal. "Go in dressed like a farmer," I recall him saying. This was no country auction, though, and dressing in bib overalls and chewing on a piece of straw would not be a way to blend in with the crowd at a high-end antique auction house in the swanky end of town. But no one would mistake me for a high roller anyway, so I went disguised as myself. The auction took place on a Saturday morning, and the room was filled with antique collectors and dealers from around the country. The auction lots were posted on the Internet and there were online and telephone bidders from around the country (or around the world, for all I knew). Like most auctions, the lot was hammered down in a few minutes. I believe I had to go back the next week to pick it up. I had the medal for a few days and packed and shipped it to Ford within a week. -Editor] 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 | |
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