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New Jersey Numismatic Journal: Vol. 31 No. 1 PDF

2006·0.75 MB·English
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New Jersey Numismatic Journal The Journal of the Carden State Numismatic Association Spring Issue 2006 Volume 31, Number I Frances Cackowski, Editor Gold is over $600, Silver over $12 Get your coins while you can! The GSNA 31st Annual Convention will be on May 16-20, 2006! & Coins are Hot!!!! Last Year’s Collectors Lining Lp. Don’t Miss Out! GSNA LEADERSHIP President: Spencer Peck, [email protected] First Vice President: Jim Majoros, [email protected] Second Vice President: Ray Williams, [email protected] Treasurer: Ron Thompson Recording Secretary: Peter Wacker, [email protected] Corresponding Secretary: Tom Rothacker, [email protected] Convention Chairman: Tom Hyland, [email protected] Membership Chairman: Dave Bailey Editor: Fran Cackowski: [email protected] WebMaster: Eric Knapp Assistant Editor: Mary Bailey Table of Contents President’s Message Page 3 Letter from the Editor Page 4 GSNA Convention Pages 5-8 Bill Dewey - In Memorium Page 9 Gold Coins in 19th Century America Page 10 YN’s at the Convention Page 12 Clubs Around the State Page 13 Advertising Pages 14, 18, 19 Exploring the ANA Page 17 Application for GSNA Membership Page 20 Advertising in the Journal Interested in advertising in the next GSNA journal? 2006 Journal Rates: $100.00 Full page 50.00 Half page 25.00 Quarterpage ! To advents, call the editor at 18-‘ 61 -65Vt> PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE By Spencer Peck This is your annual Convention Issue of the NJNJ. The Host Club for this year is the Watchung Hills Coin Club. The market remains both strong and very active with no letup in sight. This bodes well for the hobby. Anyway, on the evening of 9/11/2001, gold closed on the New York COMEX at $285.00/oz. while silver was $4.28. As 1 write this, gold is bumping into $600/oz. while silver is very close to $12.00/oz. Will the trend continue? I don't have a crystal ball but when I look at the growing national debt, balance of payments imbalances and the rush by both political parties to promise us everything for nothing, 1 see no letup in sight. Given the meandering stock market, plus low interest rates on s, mgs accounts and CDs. I believe we will see a steady movement to tangible assets for some time to come. This can only be good news for collectors. Mark your calendars for our fast approaching 31st Annual GSNA Convention to be held Thursday through Saturday May 18-20, 2006 at the Ukrainian Center in Somerset. Please note that dealer setup is from 9 AM to 1 PM on Thursday with the Convention officially opening to the public at 1 PM. If you wish to enter earlier, you may, but you will have to purchase an “Early Bird Pass” for $25.00, good for all three days. General admission for GSNA members is free, so membership does have its privileges. We will also again be offering, in conjunction with the ANA, their very popular Introduction to Grading Seminar. This will run on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 16 & 17; the two days before the Convention. It will be held again at our Convention Hotel, the DoubleTree in Somerset. This is probably the most worthwhile investment you can make in the hobby, especially when you can easily roll mortgage payments around buying coins. Knowledge is Power; Invest in Yourself. Details and application forms are posted on our web site: www.GSNA.org. The Seminar will be limited to twenty-five, so act quickly to reserve a space. Tom Hyland, our trusty bourse chairman, has rccaiitcd a full lineup of dealers in U.S. coins, currency, tokens and medals as well as world and ancient material including several out of state national dealers. See the dealer listing in this Journal for their names. John Bums will also be along from Pittsburgh with a large assortment of books. An auction by New World Rarities will be held at 6 PM on Friday. Saturday Convention features will include Larry Gentile’s very popular YN Seminar; exhibits, the annual joint EAC/C4 and NJ Exonumia Society meetings as well as a display by the U.S. Mint. If you have children or grandchildren we encourage you to bring them along. If you have thought about exhibiting, bite the bullet and share your love of the hobby. (continued on the next page) 3 PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE (continued) By Spencer Peck We encourage all members to get involved. It’s fun and you will make many new friends. If you wish to help us set up, just be at the Ukrainian Center at 4:30 PM on Wednesday the 18th. We expect to be done by 6:30 and will have dinner afterwards. Volunteers to help at the front table are always welcome. Just contact me with the times that you can help out. We will be tearing down at 4 PM on Saturday, so that is yet another opportunity to get involved. Happy Collecting and see you at the Convention, Spence - ANA LM4334 Membership has Its Privileges As we did last year, we will have a “Members Express Line” to expedite the entrance of GSNA members to the Convention. Bring along this issue of the NJNJ as your proof of membership, and you will avoid having to wait in the non-members line. Members get in free!!!! Letter from the Editor Well, convention time is upon us, and this issue is dedicated to the convention. Last year was the first time that I had attended the convention from “behind the scenes”, rather than just as an attendee. I was utterly impressed with the amount of work involved in the setup and tear down. All of the volunteers deserve a special hand from all of us!!! They are the factor that makes our convention so wonderful. I encourage all of you to attend the convention, and, if at all possible, attend the grading seminar as well. Knowledge is power, and what you learn will make you a more confident and competent collector. Don’t miss this one. I am looking forward to seeing you all there. Fran 4 GSNA Convention May 18 - 20, 2006 Somerset, NJ 31st Show! SHOW HOURS DIRECTIONS Route 287 to Exit 10 Thur. 1 PM - 7 PM Take Route 527 North. Fri. 10 AM-7 PM Turn left on Davidson Ave. Sat. 10 AM-4 PM The Ukrainian Cultural Center is on the right. Free Admission ANA & GSNA Sponsored Coin Grading Seminar For Members! May 16 & 17 Visit the GSNA web site, For more Information and an application www.GSNA.org, visit www.GSNA.org or call Spencer Peck 908-236-2880 for the latest convention and club information. NJ Token & Medal Show Auction Friday at 6 PM Books and Supplies By New World Rarities Consignments are now Exhibits being accepted. Free Appraisals Call 800-431-1018 Buy, Sell, and Trade DEALER INFORMATION Coins , Currency, Dealer set up 9 AM - 1 PM Thur. May 19 Early admission badge good Tokens, & Medals for all 3 days is $25. C4, EAC, & NJES Show Chairman: Tom Hyland Meetings Saturday Phone: 973-875-7926 Email: [email protected] YN Program 10 AM Sat 5 List of Dealers Signed Up for the Convention Abrams, Brian (New World Rarities) (Bourse and Auction) Ackerman, Alan (AALL Coins) ANA & NJES Aquilino, Myrtle Bachman, John (Bach's Coin Box) Bird, Doug Bombara, Carl Brattole, Joe (JBC) Burns, Frank (B&H Coins) C&C Enterprises (Carl Stegmaier) Crisler, Chris Cuccia, Paul C$H Cunningham, Paul & Joel Reznick D&H (Dan K and Harry S) Daniel Boon C&C (Dan Van Voorhis) Davis, Dan (Staten Island Coins) Delatola, Alex Durann, Elliot (Superior) Ellsworth, Steve (Butternut) Emanon Coin (Ralph Savarese) Enterlein, Tom Fagone, Ken & Don Hoosier Fischer, Charlie (Park Coins) GES Numis. (Jerry Swen) Hannah, Ed (EEC) Huffman, John (JT Coin/Bergen Coin) Hyland, Tom Jozapaitis, Frank (NJ Coins) Keystone (Steve Gehringer) Kramer, Jerry (Smithtown Coins) Nirat Lertchit (Smythe & Co.) 6 List of Dealers Signed Up for the Convention (continued) Middleton, Steve Minichino, Bob (Central Jersey RC) Nanson Numismatics (Richard) Parietti, Gary(L I Numismatics) Pearlman, Lou Peck, Spencer Pfau, Ralph PMJ(Paul Marino) Polonsky, Jim Reff, Greg (GEMINI Numismatics) Reynolds, Merritt (Coins of Merritt) Reynolds, Tom Rutter, Larry Sabatino, Steve (SLQ) (with Cuccia) Saslow, Arnold Shupp, George (Rahway Coin) Singer, Gordon Stepanski, Tom (Dart) Tiso, G.R. Weiss, Lorraine (Weiss Coll. Sales) Wilson, Dave Young, Chris Zaika, Al Zauche, Donald Burns, John (BOOKS) Registration Table Exhibits 7 Garden State Offers ANA Grading Seminar The Garden State Numismatic Association, in conjunction with the ANA. will be offering a Coin Grading Seminar at the DoubleTree Hotel in Somerset, New Jersey on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 16 and 17th just prior to the annual GSNA Convention scheduled for May 18 - 20 at the Ukrainian Center in Somerset, just off Route 287 exit 10 in central New Jersey. Cost is $325.00 with a $25.00 discount for ANA and/or GSNA members. Rooms are available at the DoubleTree at a GSNA group rate of $82.00 per night. Application forms and travel directions are available at the GSNA web site: www.GSNA.org or the ANA web site: www.money.org. The seminar is limited to twenty-five students. Books, lamps and necessary supplies will be provided. Students should bring their own loupes. The coins used in the Seminar will be from the ANA collection, flown in especially for this event. Because grading is a fundamental tool for collectors and a critical form of self protection; collectors new to the fraternity especially are encouraged to attend. Consider this to be your investment in yourself. We have also had many seasoned collectors enroll in past years as a refresher. Whoever you are, wherever you are, consider this opportunity as the GSNA sponsors these seminars only in even-numbered years. As an added inducement and welcome, GSNA will provide every enrollee with an Early Bird Pass for the Convention. For additional questions contact Spencer Peck, President GSNA at 908-236-2880 or by e-mail: [email protected] Hotel Information: The GSNA has a limited amount of rooms reserved at the Doubletree for $82.00 per night. Call the hotel at 732-469-2600 and request the GSNA rate. 8 Bill Dewey, Prominent Numismatist, dies Mr. Bill Dewey celebrated his 100th birthday on Dec 5, 2005. It is sad to say that Bill passed away on Sunday, April 2nd at the nursing home in Woodcliff Lake, NJ, where he had been for a number of years. Bill, a professional engineer by trade and a direct descendent of Admiral George Dewey, had a long and remarkable life with interests in numismatics that began in 1932. These interests led him to research and write about a number of subjects, primarily the Bergen Iron Works Tokens and Early Manchester and William Torrey. Just recently, he was honored with two special citations on his 100th birthday, presented by ANA president Bill Horton at the Nursing home. A number of members of New Jersey's Ocean County Coin Club will always remember Bill for his dedication and interests in the club and its members, consistently being available to discuss some of his numismatic findings at the club's "show & tell" sessions. He never forgot us and we will never forget him. Some comments by Bob Mitchell (Personal friend and member of the Ocean County Coin Club) Bill did so much in numismatics! 1 only have a few clippings that I saved.... June 1987. "Active numismatist and author for 55 years (at that time). Started collecting in 1932. joined the ANA in 1933, and helped found the Bronx Coin Club. 1934 he was a co-founder of the Westchester County NY Coin Club and served two years as its secretary. He published his first article in "The Numismatist". Dewey is a direct descendent of Admiral George Dewey and began a collection that numbered about 600 different types and varieties (in 1987). In 1935 Bill was named chairman of the ANA's advertising committee; in 1936 Vice Pres of the Westchester Coin Club; 1937 elected president and began three years service as curator of the ANA library, which he housed in his home. 1938 joined the American Numismatic Society where he was active member for 32 years. 1939 wrote an article on his specialty, Store Cards of Admiral Dewey. In the 1940s Dewey jointly authored the 50-year index of "The Numismatist,", was chairman of the ANA papers committee and chairman of the ANA National Coin Week awards committee. His nomination for the Numismatic Ambassadorship described him as "THE foremost authority on the life and medals and memorabilia of Admiral Dewey. In 1987 when this article was written. Bill was still active in researching, lecturing and collecting at age 81. In 1981 Bill wrote a book about the township entitled, "Early Manchester and William Torrey". I think I have every letter Bill wrote me since 1974 because we exchanged so much information on our mutual interests in the Ocean County money and scrip. Now I can look them over and enjoy the memories he left me with. 9 A Book Review and Commentary - Part II By David Ginsburg Continuing our story of George Devol’s life as a gambler on the Mississippi where at one time, silver was considered a nuisance, and continued to be until the beginning of the Civil War: Devol continues: “[The commission men] would put it in bags and label it with the man’s name and the amount.” On board the steamer John Raine, he found 15 “chicken men on board, who had sold their ‘coops,’ and had their sacks of silver setting in the office, as there was no room for it in the safe.” After dinner, Devol enticed them into playing three-card Monte and they bet four sacks of silver, with $500 in each. After he took their money, he got off at the next stop, where the boat was landing to take on sugar. Claiming that this was his sugar plantation, he had the porters carry his winnings ashore and the local fieldhands all greeted him by name (he says that he knew all the slaves on the “coast”). “After the boat pulled out. 1 opened one of the sacks and gave each black, one of the ‘chicken’ half dollars. They guarded the money until another boat came down, which they hailed, and I was soon on my way to New Orleans to catch some more suckers.” Later in the book, Devol writes: “There was a man in New Orleans before the war that supplied the steamboat men with silver to pay their deckhands. He could buy it at a discount, as it was a drug on the money market at that time. I have often seen him, with his two heavy leather bags, on his way from the bank to the boats.” On another occasion, Devol was on the John Simonds, when he enticed another victim into a game of three-card Monte. After the man lost $1,500 (presumably in bank notes), the victim wanted to bet $400 in gold, but Devol declined. On board the Imperial, Devol took a man for “twenty-six twenty-dollar gold pieces.” On board the Douheloon, Devol cheated a competing gambler, who had a wheel with numbers on it and pieces of jewelry and silverware on tables on top of corresponding numbers. One of the numbers occupied a very narrow space that, if the wheel stopped on it, gave the winner a watch. Devol asked if the watch was good and was told that anyone who won it could have $100 in gold if he did not want the watch. Devol put down a dollar bet and gave the wheel a spin. The man running the game was “all broke up” when the wheel stopped on the number for the watch, but gave Devol his $100 in gold. Devol put down another dollar and, amazingly, the wheel stopped on the same number! The man paid him, but gave him a look “as if he did not like me; and as 1 make it a 10

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