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The E-Sylum: Volume 28, Number 12, , Article 15

STACK'S BOWERS 1794 DOLLAR ELECTROTYPE

Stack's Bowers will be selling an electrotype of the famous British Museum specimen of the 1794 dollar in their Spring 2025 Showcase Auction. SBG Senior Numismatist Greg Cohen published this article. -Garrett

1794 Dollar Electro 1 1794 Dollar Electro 2

The price of any 1794 silver dollar places it out of the range of most collectors. For the 125 to 150 known examples, most are low-grade and/or problem coins, and these carry price tags starting in the mid-five figures. Coins higher up on the grading scale are worth well into the six figures, and those at the very top of the Census bring seven-figures. Thus, any time a 1794 silver dollar comes in it is an exciting event.

A few months back, an inquiry was submitted to Andrew Bowers that contained a sampling of silver coins and other common date coins. In the middle of the picture was a seemingly high grade 1794 silver dollar, which looked very promising (i.e. it did not have the look of the countless fakes we see often, purchased online through various websites). Andrew had the client send better photos and ascertain the weight. After reviewing the information with Vicken Yegparian, they asked the owner to submit it to us for in-person evaluation.

After reviewing the literature, the coin seemed to match the example housed in the British Museum in terms of definition. Careful inspection of the edge reviewed a small "RR" stamp within the standard lettering. The RR stands for Robert Cooper Ready, who was hired by the British Museum in 1859 to create electrotype copies of coins, medals, and seals in the collection for study and display purposes. Eventually he produced some 22,000 electrotypes for the museum; his sons followed in his footsteps, continuing this work up until 1931. With permission from the British Museum, many of Ready's electrotypes were sold to other museums and private collectors worldwide. Most often seen in the market are his very skilled copies of ancient coins. Less known are rarities such as this 1794 dollar.

1794 Dollar Electro 3

The British Museum's 1794 dollar is one of the most famous of the few survivors of this first year of issue for the American dollar. No one in 1794 would have thought that the 1,758 that were struck would be the inauguration of the power of the American dollar and the economy it represents in 2025. In 1796, Sarah Sophia Banks purchased her specimen from Captain Hawkins Whitshed. After her death in 1818, her collection, including her 1794 silver dollar, was donated to the British Museum. Martin Logies lists the British Museum example as #10 on his Condition Census, calling it AU-58, harshly cleaned, and notes that it is struck from Die State III. The electrotype presented clearly shows the striking weakness on the peripheries, as well as the mint-made adjustment marks. Richly and originally toned with a mix of russet, copper-gold, and olive, this piece has a fantastic visual appearance

Submitted to PCGS for grading, this Robert Ready Electrotype 1794 dollar is graded AU-58. It presents an important opportunity for a collector to add a highly appealing filler example to their collection without spending close to $1 million for a genuine piece of comparable quality.

To read the complete article, see:
Rare and Historic Robert Ready Electrotype of British Museum's 1794 Dollar to Cross The Block In Spring 2025 Rarities Night (https://stacksbowers.com/rare-and-historic-robert-ready-electrotype-of-british-museums-1794-dollar-to-cross-the-block-in-spring-2025-rarities-night/)

To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see:
ROBERT READY AND SONS, ELECTROTYPISTS (https://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v13n30a12.html)
ROBERT READY'S BRITISH MUSEUM REPLICAS (https://www.coinbooks.org/v21/esylum_v21n11a12.html)
MORE ON READY'S BRITISH MUSEUM REPLICAS (https://www.coinbooks.org/v21/esylum_v21n12a10.html)

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.

To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@gmail.com

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