20 Dollar    (Vendue pour $115000.0)

1921 $20 St. Gaudens. NGC graded MS-61. Nice even golden toning. A popular key date. Frosty Mint quality and just shy of the Choice category. Full bright yellow-gold luster with its wisp of red enhances the coin, the luster showing much some cartwheel display. A few scattered marks are to be found on the obverse, while the reverse boasts a suitable satin-like and mark-free surface. We note a faint line in the color at the eagle's beak. A mintage of 528,500 pieces would seem to make the 1921 a common enough issue; however, the coin was produced in the depths of a short, sharp post-World War I business depression. Like other dates in the series, many of this issue was stored in banks, at the Federal Reserve, or in U.S. Treasury vaults. Presumably these met the same fate in 1933-37 as so many millions of other $20 gold pieces, they were melted. In terms overall rarity, the 1921 is considered fourth rarest in the Saint-Gaudens double eagle series after the 1907 Ultra High Relief, 1927-D, and 1933. This issue is difficult to locate in Mint State, moreso than even the 1930-S and 1931-D. That makes this an offering of significant importance to 20th century gold collectors. Again, both sides display original golden patina and swirling luster. Pop 14; 23 finer, 15 in 62, 7 in 63, 1 in 64 (PCGS # 9172) . 1921 is the year President Warren Gamaliel Harding (1921-23) took office as President of the United States. He was a decent man of reasonable talents say some. He held poker games in the White House twice a week. And whenever he got a chance, he sneaked away to a burlesque show. The ladies loved him; he returned the favor. These pastimes seemed enough for the man; they helped him bear up in his eminent role and keep him from wanting to do anything. Another saving grace was that Harding neither thought nor spoke clearly enough for anyone to figure out what he was saying. He couldn't rally the troops and get them behind his ideas; he had none. And even if he tried, they wouldn't comprehend him. H.L. Mencken, the social commentator and political gadfly of the twenties, preserved a bit of what he called "Gamalielese," just to hold it up to ridicule: "I would like government to do all it can to mitigate, then, in understanding in mutuality of interest, in concern for the common good, our tasks will be solved." The sentence is so idiotic and meaningless, it could have come from the mouths of any of our recent high officials. But the crowds seemed to like the way Harding delivered it. He said it with such solid conviction, it "was like a blacksmith bringing down a hammer on an egg," says Mencken. Estimated Value $130,000 - 140,000. Categories:
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Cette pièce a été vendue   $115000.0 / 2010-05-30

Transaction details: https://www.hobbyray.com/page-cache/6281c4b1d1d141b89b4c49fb760214e4.html
Posté par: anonymous
2015-03-06
Groupe de pièces
 Valeur: 20 Dollar
 Métal: Or
 État: États-Unis d'Amérique (1776 - )
 
Description:   English
Variations: 181 pices
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