Harvey Stack submitted these remembrances of September 11 and its effect on their New York-based numismatic business. Thanks!
-Editor
A "9 - 11" NUMISMATIC STORY FEW KNOW ABOUT
Stack's planned in 2001 to have an important public
Auction sale in September, to be held on September 12, 13 in New York. The
coins were to be consigned by our close friend and collector, and important teacher,
Cornelius Vermule, who was the numismatic director of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and
the Massachusetts Historical Society, who collected and taught Greek and Roman history,
and also had a great interest in the coinage of the Far East. His collection was one of the
most worthy in the various fields he amassed.
Since the Stack family, all of us, were very close friends of "Bucky" (his nick-name given to
him by his very close friends and colleagues), we felt it would be appropriate to offer his
collection in our early fall sale. September was selected, as it would be close to the
Summer ANA convention, and many of our overseas clients would still be traveling about the United States and would schedule to examine the collection, plan to attend and/or leave bids. The dates of the sale were to be after Labor Day that year, and we selected the sale dates of September 12, 13. A super illustrated catalog was prepared and we planned a long pre-sale exhibition time to gather the best audience we could.
The Stack family in 2001 all lived on Long Island, about 40 minutes from our offices.
Those members of the family included myself (Harvey), Larry, my son, my wife, Harriet,
and my daughter Susan. We all drove together in one car, carrying with us our
personal luggage for several nights stay, had hotel rooms reserved for our staff,
and left early in the morning to be ready to serve the viewers and dealers who
came to New York before the sale and planned to view the lots on September 11
and 12. Others arrived before and our pre-sale viewing audience was immense.
We traveled through the borough of Queens on our way to the bridge crossing the Harlem river, to Manhattan, then to the westside drive along the Hudson to downtown New York.
As we began crossing the bridge, a flash came over the radio, that a plane struck
one of the twin trade towers, and people were trying to leave the building. Thousands
were therein employed and many died in the fire and collapse. Shortly thereafter
the second tower was announced as also hit by another passenger plane, again
engulfing the buildings in more fire and falling debris. The reports were horrifying.
And the Stack family was still crossing the bridge to Manhattan and the westside
drive, people were running out into the streets, not even knowing where they were
going. All were bewildered and kept looking up to see if more aircraft might be coming
their way. Once on 155th street we passed the courtyard where the American
Numismatic Society had its museum and library for many decades. We then turned
south on Broadway for some blocks.
We were able to turn east on 86th street and then when we reached Broadway
we were directed south again as the full length of Central Park would block us
from proceeding east. We continued down Broadway, past Lincoln Center in
the 60's and on to Broadway again and found ourselves within a few blocks of
56th street where we had a reserved place for our car in a garage located between
7th avenue and the Avenue of the Americas (the old 6th Avenue) and pulled into
our garage. Taking our bags with us, we went next door to the Parker Meridian
Hotel which had entrances on both 56th street and 57th street, directly across the street from our offices at 123 West 57th street. It was a joy to see, the window
gates were still down, no signs of vandalism, our armed guard standing before
the entrance. We at least made it to our "home away from home !!!
We went through the lobby of the Hotel Salisbury (our landlord). l opened the shop
at its side door in the hotel lobby, went to give the alarm response (but it wasn't
working), turn on the lights, only some were functioning and realizing the air conditioner
won't function without full power. We listened further to the radio (battery operated), and
learned of a third plane that hit the Pentagon and a fourth crashed in Pennsylvania.
Nobody knew if more were coming, where they came from and what was the
immense damage and personal loss at the Trade Center. But we and a few of our
staff who made it by subway or bus service made it to the shop.
Larry and I reviewed the entire situation as it occurred, and realized that
those traveling by plane or train, or driving in cars, would have
difficulty in making it to New York to look at the lots or attend the sale.
What to do? We decided to cancel the sale!!! Most businesses in New York did likewise, and so the city was no doubt still a target and those coming or there already would not be safe. We decided we could re-issue the catalog, and run the Cornelius Vermuele sale in November, if all that occurred a day before
the sale calms down.
When the phones rang, we announced sale canceled!!!! When those in the
city walked by we had to announce sale canceled. The internet was given
the same announcement. With the over 700 sales that Stack's
catalogued and conducted from 1935 to 2001, this would be
the very first one we ever had to cancel. It was surely the right thing to do.
[For the numismatic record the day that John Kennedy was shot and killed in Dallas in1963, we had a similar decision to make. Would it be unpatriotic to have a sale on this tragic day??? Not having the answer, one of our
great cataloguers, James C. Risk, who served in the Navy during World War II and
who later was a diplomat to England, called on our behalf a
close friend at our State Department to ask if this was unpatriotic. The answer
came back that since the event was scheduled prior to the date of the assassination,
and people had traveled or were already in attendance for that evening's sale,
they recommend that the leader of the event (the auctioneer in this case) before
the sale starts ask the audience to stand in silence, offer a prayer, and remain
calm and thoughtful for about two minutes) and then let the auction proceed.
I, Harvey G. Stack, was the auctioneer of record for that sale. I made the appropriate
announcement, had all stand in silence for over two minutes. And then started
to offer the first lot for sale. It was such an emotional moment for me and
those who participated in the sale, that I stuttered calling the first lot, which sold
very slowly and eventually went to a floor bidder. The next
four or five lots I sold, I also was stuttering, but got the lots sold. Once
the emotional wave left me, I successfully conducted the balance of the
lots to be offered that evening. As a professional auctioneer these first
lots were the hardest I ever sold, but I am certain you can understand
the emotion I felt that evening. ]
Now back to the evening of 9 - 11. To get food was the next chore. Most restaurants had closed, some even boarded up (expecting looting), and with power failures occurring sporadically, phone service disrupted,
and delivery services stopped cold, all went for the best survival they could
do and also try to get home. We fortunately had a very good Greek restaurant
on our street and all got something to eat, in small groups, and tried to get into our hotel rooms. Another difficult job. If you were on a lower floor
you could walk up - if not, our Hotel Salisbury got their staff to bring a few cots
into our offices even though the air conditioning was faulty so we each took
turns walking out our side door to get fresh air in the street (it was a hot and
humid night but we endured.
We could not leave the shop for our alarm system wasn't working, and if someone broke in it could have been a disaster . On September 12th things started functioning again, the radio kept us up to date about the collapse at
the World Trade Center, the Pentagon hit and the Pennsylvania crash. The
news was terrible. During our stay at the office, we had our own Holmes
armed guard watching that no one tried to break in, the alarm company
made some temporary connections to our holdup system, but the electricity
was still in an "on & off" state, the telephones and the lights the same,
and most of our electronic equipment still not functioning. We were there
but virtually in a "stand and wait for further assistance mode !!!
A few restaurants that had power re-opened and we could get some breakfast,
and a few sandwiches for lunch. On the day after the attack, we learned that
one of our favorite steak houses a few blocks from our offices was opened, so
I took the few girls that were still with us, my family and went to the famous
Ben Benson's to try to get a good meal after our recent ordeal. Their
refrigeration seemed to function so most of us had a sea food cocktail, a steak or lamb chops but no bread. Because of the attack, no real food deliveries
came into Manhattan. Because of bomb threats no trucks could
make it. So we all had crackers and were thankful for them !!
On September 13, two days after the attack, our electricity went full power, our phones
functioned, the air conditioning worked (this was still very hot and humid summer
weather for New York but, however, the city seemed to get back to some order).
Police patrol cars, EMS vehicles and fire apparatus continued to patrol the streets at
close intervals to each other.
Stack's survived the crisis, our clients all thanked us for canceling the sale. Fortunately
shortly thereafter our offices were back in full gear. The whole affair still
gives me chills and hoping we do not ever have to endure a period like 9-11.
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
THOUGHTS ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF 9/11
(https://www.coinbooks.org/v24/esylum_v24n37a16.html)
THE BOOK BAZARRE
1946–2021: CELEBRATING 75 YEARS of the RED BOOK.
The 75th edition of the Guide Book of United States Coins will release next week, April 7, 2021. Preorder now to reserve your copy—online
at
Whitman.com
, or call 1-800-546-2995.
Wayne Homren, Editor
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