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The E-Sylum: Volume 27, Number 14, April 7, 2024, Article 16

CHAPMAN-ASSEMBLED GOLD DOLLARS SURFACE

A high-grade collection of gold dollars recently surfaced in Philadelphia; here's the announcement. -Editor

  1863 $1 gold

A previously unreported, nearly complete date set of 19th-century United States $1 denomination gold coins assembled by legendary Philadelphia dealer Henry Chapman has been revealed by Matador Rare Coins in New York City.

Stored until recently in a Philadelphia bank vault and safe deposit boxes for more than a century, the formerly hidden collection has 51 Liberty Head and Indian Princess Head dollars struck between 1849 and 1889 as well as eight U.S. commemorative gold dollars struck in the first decades of the 20th-century.

The set, now described as The Henry Chapman Collection of $1 Gold, has been owned and securely stored for generations by a Philadelphia area family. The current owners thought their ancestors' coins might be worth about $50,000, but they are now insured for $2 million, according to Luis Martinez, founder and president of Matador Rare Coins He is working with the set's owners who want to remain anonymous.

Chapman coin envelope Chapman personally began assembling this collection for a banking family in 1899 and the coins have remained in the family's possession continuously for generations. The set includes several coins among the finest known examples of their kind today, and there are gold dollars struck at the Charlotte, Dahlonega, New Orleans, Philadelphia and San Francisco Mints, said Martinez.

When I received the coins, I carefully reviewed each example. Housed in the original envelopes from Henry Chapman's shop in Philadelphia, a number of the coins carried exuberant eye appeal. I was truly in awe as I reviewed each coin one at a time. I knew then that this collection could truly be a national treasure, stated Martinez.

All the coins are now certified by Professional Coin Grading Service (www.PCGS.com) with the Chapman pedigree indicated on the encapsulated insert label.

"PCGS is proud to have been able to unite these coins with their impressive pedigree at the September 2023 Long Beach Expo," said PCGS President Stephanie Sabin. "This historic collection boasts not only magnificent rarities and grades, but also hails from the cabinets of renowned collector Henry Chapman. Preserving the coins themselves and their history is an honor."

The grading results were beyond my expectations with a number of the coins reaching the finest known tier, said Martinez. When I shared the results with the owners, they were astonished and filled with disbelief. A collection they would have sold for about $50,000 could now potentially bring in well over seven figures at auction!

1863 gold $1 envelope Among the highlights are an 1863 gold dollar graded PCGS MS68 CAC and tied for finest known; 1881 graded PCGS PR66 Deep Cameo and tied for finest known among the remaining survivors of only 87 struck; 1884 graded PCGS PR67+ Cameo CAC tied with one other for finest known; and an 1887 gold dollar graded PCGS MS67+ CAC. An example of the 1875 $1 gold – with a small mintage of only 400 -- is graded PCGS AU58 CAC.

The U.S. began making $1 gold pieces in 1849, a year after the start of the California Gold Rush. A little smaller than a modern U.S. dime, the gold dollars were struck over the years with three different designs – Liberty Head from 1849 to 1854; Indian Princess Small Head from 1854 to 1856; and the Indian Princess Large Head type from 1856 to 1889, explained Martinez.

Over the years and at various times, five mints were involved in striking $1 gold: Charlotte, North Carolina; Dahlonega, Georgia; New Orleans, Louisiana; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and San Francisco, California.

The commemorative gold coins in the collection include a 1903 Louisiana Purchase McKinley graded PCGS MS68 and tied for finest known; a 1905 Lewis and Clark graded PCGS MS67; 1915-S Panama-Pacific graded MS67; 1917 McKinley graded PCGS MS67, and a 1922 Grant With Star variety graded PCGS MS67+ CAC.

Additional, specific information about each of the coins in The Henry Chapman Collection of $1 Gold will be released soon, according to Martinez.

John Albanese, founder of CAC, was surprised to learn about the long-concealed gold dollars and then view them in person: I've been around the numismatic block a few times since the 1970s and thought we've seen probably everything there is to see in great collections. I almost fell off the chair when these coins came in. It's nice to know there are still great coins out there. It gives us hope.

Henry Chapman and his brother Samuel Hudson (S.H.) Chapman were well-known late 19th and early 20th-century Philadelphia coin dealers and auctioneers. Numismatic bibliographer Pete Smith describes the Chapman brothers as the first career coin dealers in the United States and who were innovative with the use of photographic plates to illustrate their catalogs.

For additional information about the set, contact Matador Rare Coins at 877-757-3665 or visit www.MatadorRareCoins.com.



Wayne Homren, Editor

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