ANA AUTHENTICATION BUREAU
DECLARES RECOVERED UNIQUE
DUPONT COIN GENUINE
The 1866 unique, Proof "No
Motto" silver quarter dollar, stolen from Willis H. du Pont in a 1967 robbery
and recently recovered in Los Angeles, is genuine, according to the American
Numismatic Association (ANA) Authentication Bureau.
"This is the fourth coin
stolen from Mr. du Pont that the ANA has authenticated," says Edward C.
Rochette, executive director of the 29,000-member nonprofit, educational
organization for collectors of coins, paper money, tokens and medals. "We
personally assisted in the recovery and authentication of his two 1804
Bust dollars - the first one in 1981 and the second in 1994. The latter
recovery also included Mr. Du Pont's one-of-a-kind 1850 Stockton' $5 gold
piece, which the ANA also authenticated."
The coin was examined by
both ANA Money Museum Curator Robert W. Hoge and ANA Authenticator Brian
Silliman, who says, "We are confident it is, in fact, the du Pont specimen
and not a newly discovered piece."
The du Pont 1866 silver quarter
dollar does not have the motto "In God We Trust" on the reverse. The motto
was not included on the Seated Liberty quarter at its premiere in 1838,
but was added in 1866.
The unique coin, owned by
du Pont, was struck by the United States Mint at the request of druggist
Robert Coulton Davis, who reputedly provided Mint personnel with laudanum
- a solution of opium in alcohol.
Following the previous recoveries
of du Pont coins, the ANA has been allowed to display them in its Money
Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In 1994 he donated to the ANA his
specimen of the 1804 Bust dollar recovered earlier that year. In 1991,
Aubrey and Adeline Bebee had donated to the ANA their specimen of the 1804
Bust dollar. Considered the "king of American coins" because they originally
were produced as gifts to Asian potentates, the 1804 Bust dollars are valued
at more than $1 million each. A privately held specimen sold at auction
last August for $4.12 million, the most ever paid for a single coin.
An image of the 1866 unique,
Proof "No Motto" silver quarter dollar can be seen (beginning in January)
on the ANA's "Virtual Money Museum" at www.money.org.