David Yoon of the American Numismatic Society (and former editor of our print journal The Asylum) was quoted in this article about the chance find of a hoard of
Krugerrands. -Editor
ANJA MASER, MANAGER OF THE Lindenhof Senior Center in Lürrip, Germany, was unpacking a box of donated food when she encountered a heavy box hidden below. Inside was—literally—treasure. The
box contained gold coins, 109 in total, featuring a springbok, South Africa’s national animal. A quick online search revealed that they were highly valuable Kruggerand bullion coins.
The Kruggerand—whose exchange rate is fixed daily and determined by the price of gold—was introduced in 1967, as a vehicle for the private ownership of gold after the demise of the gold standard.
It became one of the most popular bullion coins—money minted to store value rather than to be used in day-to-day commerce—and by 1980 accounted for 90 percent of the global gold coin market.
Apart from its value and its connections to apartheid, the Krugerrand was an important numismatic innovation. “This was the first gold bullion coin introduced after gold coins had ceased to exist
as currency,” says David Yoon of the American Numismatic Society. “Several other countries, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, and China now issue gold coins for the same reason—but South Africa
was the first one.”
Today a single Krugerrand is worth approximately $1,300, so the coins that Maser found amount to a small fortune. Maser and he colleague Claudia Spetsmann contacted the police to try locate the
donor of the box of food, and eventually reached a local, 78-year-old widow. “We knew absolutely nothing about her as the senior center only moved to Lürrip a few days ago,” Spetsman told the
Rheinische Post. The woman was very grateful for the return of a treasure that her late husband had secreted away.
To read the complete article, see:
Found: A Fortune in Gold Coins in a Box of Donated Food
(https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/found-gold-coins-box-donated-food-germany-returned)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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