Last week we had an article about the Tuttle numismatic museum in Defiance, OH. Bruce H. Smith visited the museum last week and posted a
report and some images to the Yahoo Colonial Coins group. They're republished here, with permission. Thanks!
Andrew Tuttle was an enigmatic character and inveterate collector. He was killed in an automobile accident in 2003 and in his
handwritten will left his collections to the city of Defiance with the stipulation that the city establish a museum named in his honor.
This has been done, although his bequest took everyone by surprise. He had no family, and I was told that when he died the emergency
contact found in his wallet was for a high school classmate he hadn't seen since their graduation in 1937. He was a traveler, and there
are some interesting letters from abroad displayed in the museum. One is from a dissatisfied coin dealer in Sri Lanka putting a curse on
him.
The colonials are displayed in two cases in the vault of the museum which once housed a bank. There is a nice representation of colonial
material, but not all of the holdings are on display. Also, the colonials are only a small part of the coin collection. In an adjacent case
are some "odd and curious" items. Displayed along with the coins are Tuttle's annotated 2 X 2 envelopes. Many of them show
Stack's and Coin Galleries provenance. The Virginia piece was from the Donald L. Rhodes sale of 1958 with which I was not familiar.
Most of what is in the cases appeared to have been collected in the late 50s into the 60s.
I spoke with the City Historian and one of the curators. They were receptive to having a more thorough study of the collection done.
They said that that know little about the coins and would welcome information. I left them a spare copy of Crosby. I was also told that
Mr.Tuttle had formed his collection with the assistance of Steve Davis. He's helped the museum deaccession some material, no colonials,
and another auction is scheduled for later this year.
I thought things were well chosen by Mr. Tuttle. The Virginia and Rosa Americana were uncirculated. The Baltimore was lower grade. Most
of the rest of the copper was nice VF-XF looking with good surfaces. Whether the coins not on display are equal in condition, I'll have
to wait to find out.
A draped bust dollar was included as example of an early U. S. mint coin. It looked F - VF, and I have no idea if it was a scarcer
variety.
It was essentially a nice type set. Single examples of state coinages (Vermonts, African Head, A NJ I recognized but don't know),
Nova Eborac, Kentucky, a Pillar 8 R, a George III guinea, a small U. S. Constellatio. The photos show the Virgina halfpenny, Rhode Island
Ship Token, Rosa Americana, and the Lord Baltimore pieces. Those were probably the nicest coins. I didn't try to identify anything by
variety except for the few I knew. No MA silver, no St. Pat's, nothing I saw as really rare, on display at least.
The people were very nice. Who knows what might be there. In any case it's good to know a place like this exists. It certainly helps
bring colonial coins to an audience that may otherwise never know of their existence.
Thanks for the report and photos! -Editor
Steve Davis of Numismatic Auctions L.L.C. adds:
I am in a multi-year contract offering duplicates and non-display items with the Tuttle Museum. I sold some wonderful material from
the collection in my last Auction Sale #56 including a Gobrecht Dollar and a 144pc collection of US Commemorative Half Dollars. I am
auctioning some fine Latin American Coinage, Patterns and Cut and Countermarked coinage from the museum holdings in my June 29, 2015
Auction Sale #57.
To visit the Numismatic Auctions web site, see:
www.numismaticauctionsllc.com
Jeff Starck of Coin World adds:
The city of Defiance’s passage of an “emergency” ordinance to allow the sale. The money apparently was going to be used by the museum
board, based on a reading of the ordinance.
To read the complete article, see:
ORDINANCE NO. 7663
(www.cityofdefiance.com/main/images/council/legislation/2014/9-23-14.pdf)
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
DEFIANCE BANK BUILDING HOUSES TUTTLE MUSEUM
(www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n14a24.html)
THE BOOK BAZARRE
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Wayne Homren, Editor
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