ELIASBERG 1913 LIBERTY NICKEL OFFERED
Speaking of coins with an Eliasberg pedigree, Bloomberg published an article June 19, 2018 about the upcoming sale of the
Eliasberg 1913 Liberty Nickel and the family selling it. -Editor
In the late 1980s, William Morton-Smith, a Santa Barbara, Calif.-based doctor, was rummaging through a garage that contained some of his deceased
parents’ belongings. He opened the drawer of an old desk, and “there was a bunch of loose coins,” says Morton-Smith’s son, Tim.
Most people, when confronted with a pile of change, would simply put the coins in their pocket and forget about it. But “luckily,” Morton Smith
says, “my dad had some wits about him, enough to realize they could be worth something.”
To be fair, Morton-Smith had a tip-off: The desk had belonged to his grandfather William Spaulding, the scion of a Boston Brahmin family whose
wealth came primarily from sugar refineries. Together with his brother John, Spaulding was one of the wealthiest men in New England.
The Spauldings were prolific art collectors, and their 1921 donation of more than 6,000 Japanese prints to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston
represents a significant cornerstone of the institution’s collection.
“But no one ever knew of any reference to coins,” says Morton-Smith.
Not long after his discovery back in the 1980s, Morton-Smith’s father began an investigation into the coin’s origins. What he found inspired him
to keep hunting for more rare monetary units; the result is one of the most significant numismatic collections in the U.S.
“My dad had a thing for coins, prior to discovering the drawer,” his son says, “but that really kicked off his interest. It triggered a modern-day
treasure hunt, where he peeled back the history of the coins.”
At the time of his death in 2016, Morton-Smith had amassed a set of coins whose value Brian Kendrella, the president of the coin auctioneer
Stack’s Bowers Galleries, estimates at $10 million. “Dr. Morton-Smith was definitely a collector, but he was also—and I hate this term, but I’m going
to use it—a trophy hunter,” says Kendrella. “He just bought spectacular pieces.”
The drawer contained colonial cents, half-cents, and most prominent, an almost-complete set of Liberty Head nickels. The coins were made from 1883
to 1912 and depict Lady Liberty on one side and a V, the roman numeral for 5, on the other.
The set, which is worth about $100,000, was missing a piece that would elevate its value to the millions: a rare 1913 version of the coin that was
struck by the United States Mint before its run of Liberty Head nickels was canceled. “Since it was discovered, it’s been one of the most
sought-after coins in the United States,” says Kendrella.
After more than two decades, Morton-Smith finally completed his grandfather’s collection by purchasing one of those three nickels— the so called
“Eliasberg Nickel,” named after its onetime owner, collector Louis Eliasberg, for a reported $5 million in 2007.
Now, as his children auction off the estate, that single 1913 nickel will come to auction at Stack’s Bowers in Philadelphia in August. (The
children will not sell all of the set, for sentimental reasons.) The nickel carries a relatively conservative $3 million-to-$5 million estimate.
To read the complete article, see:
How a Few Nickels
Grew Into a Multi-Million Dollar Coin Collection
(https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-06-19/how-a-few-nickels-grew-into-a-multi-million-dollar-coin-collection)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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