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 Tuesday, December 11, 2007
ANS Museum Building sold for 23.9 Million !
Posted by george

It is done. The American Numismatic Society has sold their “close to the Financial District” building gifted to them several years ago, and only partially renovated and occupied since that time for $23.9 Million Dollars. This photo is of the William Street facade, which was often hidden under scafolding.

  ANSfulton.JPG

This is the first time that the ANS will have a big bunch of un-restricted cash to play with. May their investment plans go well.

 

The re-relocation is planed to take place in the second half of 2008.

 

The new location will be the 11th floor of a 19 story renovation by Trinity Properties at the intersection of Varick, Grand and Canal Streets, “near” SoHo and Tribeca.

 

It is interesting to note that this location is about 5 blocks away from a propery on Houston Street which was turned down as a location prior to the move to Fulton St.

 

Formerly known as 75 Varick St., the building is a block away from the Canal Street stations of the 1/9 Subway; 3 blocks for the C/E trains; 7 blocks for the N/R lines; and 9 blocks from the 4-5-6 routes (Hint: change at 42nd street for the 1, seems like old times, when one needed to go to their 155th Street location!).   

 

I was pleased to read the Executive directors’ comments that the Harry Bass Jr. Library, and the John J. Ford Jr. areas will be modernized. That at least says to me there will be not be a major fundraising drive for new naming areas and offices for this newer location. Also of note is that conference and meeting room facilities will be "state of the art" which will be a huge improvement of the old first floor banking room currently being used for public meetings.

 

It seems like the best of timing that Frank Campbell has announced his retirement to occur before he has to deal with another move! I wish Frank the very best!

 

George


World Coin Stuff
12/11/2007 3:43:53 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, December 07, 2007
Lie on your back and make sure the shades are drawn at the station.
Posted by george

Amtrak adventure for Thanksgiving.

For my PTO adventure this past Thanksgiving, I returned to New York City via Amtrak rather than chance another bumpy airplane ride, delayed luggage and airport delays.

On the printed schedule I could see that a once-a-day bus from Waupaca, 13 miles away, would connect with every-two hour service in Milwaukee, to get me on the evening train from Chicago to NYC. Amtrak’s Lake Shore Limited is their name for the old New York Central’s Twentieth Century Limited, of Broadway show fame. The route was Chicago-Toledo-Cleveland-Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse-Albany-New York City. On the schedule at 21 hours travel time, two hour longer than the best schedule of the New York Central RR.

However, for the return trip, the Amtrak representative wanted to book me on the Cardinal, service from New York City to Washington, then Washington to Chicago, via Cumberland, Pittsburgh and Indianapolis.  I said this was odd, and they informed me that the Lakeshore westbound would be running late and I would miss the once-a-day bus out of Milwaukee. My first dilemma developed.  I decided to ditch the bus, drive to Milwaukee, adding mileage and parking fees to the trip and take the Lakeshore roundtrip. Amtrakbed.JPG

I also decided to go first class, in a roomette. The roomette is an expensive option, even with the two meals and a light snack which is included; and a night’s sleep, if one could sleep on the train.

I traveled extensively in the old Pullman style roomettes of the 1970s. The Southern Crescent, Southwest Chief, Texas Star, Silver Meteor, the City of New Orleans were all trains I rode on during the late 1970s. The new roomettes are different, but similar. They are actually built for two, not one as the old ones were, and are thus very economical for families.

The food service was a micro-waved prepared meal presented on a plastic plate. I learned that the full service diner was removed at the end of last year. For dinner I had the salmon, and on the return trip the chicken caesar salad and liked both.

Reading while seated in the roomette was pleasant, sleeping was a different matter. The track condition made the car rock, and thus sleeping on one’s back was the safest method. If you prefer to sleep on your side, as I do, then one is rocked to such an extent that you could experience bruising. Also, the curtains in the room need to be tucked into a slot next to the glass, to eliminate the aisle lights which remain on all night and can reflect right onto your pillow placement. And as the toilet is en-suite, do make sure your shades to the world are drawn incase you come into a station, or pass a track work crew.

Sadly, Amtrak experiences second rate service, waiting on sidings for fast freight trains, thus affecting the on-time reliability.

Both Chicago and New York offer lounges for First Class passengers which were nice.

Would I do it again. Yes.

George



12/7/2007 9:05:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, December 06, 2007
Iraq Dinar Counterfeit scheme uncovered!
Posted by george

Counterfeits valued at 900 million dinars uncovered !

It was only a matter of time that a counterfeit operation would be uncovered. Over the last week this was posted by the news service bureau of the Multi-National Corps - Iraq, Public Affairs Office, Camp Victory:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RELEASE No. 20071130-09
November 30, 2007

Iraqi Army seizes counterfeit money
Multi-National Division – Baghdad PAO

FORWARD OPERATING BASE LOYALTY, Iraq – Iraqi Army troops captured two suspected insurgents and recovered counterfeit Iraqi dinars during an operation in eastern Baghdad, Nov. 27.

More than 900 million counterfeit Iraqi dinars was uncovered in the operation, along with a printing press and four computers. The press and computers were also seized.

The suspects are being held for questioning.

The denominations and identifying information was not forthcoming when asked.

So there will be some interesting collectibles out there. And do be careful when buying bulk lots of currency on various internet auction sites.

George


Paper Money Values
12/6/2007 2:36:13 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Banknotes for sale, and they are going away, far away!
Posted by george

Shopping for Notes?

This fall I have had the opportunity to help a “retired” collector disperse his paper money collection. I found it was interesting in that it was a mix of numerous very expensive items and a bunch of common items, and then some non-saleable items. It was a collection in that it was organized, labeled and identified, but it did not form a pattern – it was purely random. EAS6.jpgThere were no complete country type groups, nor topical areas such as birds or Queen Elizabeth II portraits. Many of the items were purchased in-country on overseas business trips in the mid 1960s.

That is what made it exciting. It was fresh material. Several high denominations, some of which I had never seen in person. When I priced it out and brought it to the Mid-west chapter of the International Bank Note Society, I created a feeding frenzy at two meetings straight!

Now, I have begun to sell the notes on a popular internet auction site. Due to the weak dollar, strong Pound and Euro, and many other currencies, and the ease of electronic payment, most of my sales have been to overseas customers, both in Europe and Asia. The cash availability and market for China is exploding.

It is nice to have the opportunity to experience and play in the marketplace, rather than being an observer.

George


Paper Money Values
12/5/2007 9:08:36 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
World Aids Day, numismatics and remembrance.
Posted by george

World Aids Day and Numismatics?

Okay, it is a few days after our annual global reminder that AIDS/HIV is still with us and still affecting various portions of the population. Sorry I did not post this on the proper day, I was traveling.

However, is also is a sad reminder for me about the loss of Michael J. Druck. Mike and I grew up together in NYC numismatics in the 1970s, I went to work for the American Numismatic Society, he for MTB. By late 1989 we bAIDS002.jpgoth were working at Stack’s. It was during those years that his illness became more aggressive, and he became more active and vocal about it. As a hemophilic he received a bad dose of clotting factor – as it was deemed too expensive to check the blood supply at the time. Wow, to be killed by the drug that you needed to live. What a predicament. What absurdity that a company, or organization (International Red Cross), or country (France and the US) would not consider testing important enough. Most hemophilics of his generation or earlier are all dead, that is why you do hear of that illness anymore. You can read his article in the New York Times here.

On the other side of the pond, Nicholas Lowick, islamic specialist and curator at the British Museum died from the illness in the late 1980s. The Royal Numismatic Society has created a fund and award in his honor.

Sure, in retrospect we can say many people's initial responce was all wrong, but the illness still has a large stigma attached to it in the “developed” world, and an even voodoo-like stigma in some less developed countries.

Be educated, be careful.sticksandstones[1].jpg

Medallic Art has had some very interesting responses to AIDS/HIV. Canadian Sculptor Del Newbigging has done a series of medals.  A cast bronze work exhibits the hatred of words and labels used to belittle and shame the victim. The scene is the angry crowd wielding bats, and defending their actions by carrying a holy book. The reverse is a famous rhyme, and a hanging victim. Newbigging notes on his website description that: “words can destroy the victim. By acknowledging the power of words, perhaps humanity will be able to control them when they are used to attack and kill.”

He also has designed an eight medal badge set denoting the various ethnic, distinction[1].jpgreligious, social groups prosecuted by the Nazi regime. The color triangle codes used by the Nazis to distinguish the groups forms the continuity of the series. The pink triangle has seen a resurgence of use since the late 1980s with certain groups in the AIDS movement.

So, on this World Aids Day, you can play a part in education, and work with politicians to fund research properly.

George



12/5/2007 8:51:40 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, November 16, 2007
Gold up, Gold Rush! just published by KP
Posted by george

Krause Publications releases Gold Rush! book, edited by Arlyn Sieber with Mitchell Battino as contributing editor.Z1025.jpg

This 6x9 format, full color 272 page book takes the commonly traded modern gold value listings from the Standard Catalog of World Coins Catalogs (19th thru 20th Centuries) and packages them with selected illustrations into a concise guide for the non-collector bitten and smitten by the gold rise in the past two years.

United States, Great Britain, France, German, Austrian, Canadian, Italian issues of circulating types, as well as certain world commemoratives are featured. A handy Gold Bullion value chart is included to assist in the varitation between the price of Gold determined at publication and the current ever-changing (and of late rising) gold bullion price.

List price is 22.99 and it is number Z1025 in the Krause Books catalog, available directly from the publisher, or your favorite book dealer.

George


KP News | World Coin Stuff
11/16/2007 3:56:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Vacation and Book Production
Posted by george

December tends to be my busy month, with the editing of the next edition of the Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, Modern issues in full swing. So, I tend to enjoy a bit of "down time" in November before the final push.

That is not to say I have be idle in my cube wall all summer. This week alone I have processed over 900 photos of bank notes to scan for our eventual upgrade to NumisMaster's World Paper Money section.

On the other digital project here at KP, I have been testing the NumisMaster segment for the Standard Catalog of U.S. Paper Money. It will be a live version of the catalog, color photos of note types, and should be easy to navigate for the general public to find out information and prices of currency. After that roll-out, the Modern World Paper Money will be next, with General issues and Specialized issues soon to follow in 2008.

For the first time in nearly 10 years I have agreed to go back to Astoria, NY for Turkey day. For only the second time in the thirteen years I have been in Wisconsin, I decided to take Amtrak, but this time upgrade to first class in a roomette (meals included too).

After two anoying airplane trips earlier in the year, I've been trying to stay out of the skyways.

In NYC I plan to induce my Turkeyday comma with friends, visit at least two contributors to the Standard Catalog of World Paper Money, and attend my grammer school's founding 50th Anniversary social.

So, perhaps you'll get a report from me off-site, but perhaps not.

George



11/16/2007 9:12:45 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Sunday, November 11, 2007
Some Veterans Day reflections
Posted by george

November 11th. Orignally set aside for the rememberance of WWI soilders, as it was at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month that the Armistice went into effect after it was signed earlier that morning,  as the time to end hostilities on the Western Front. It was signed in a railroad car in the French woods; which was later blown up by the German army during WWII. After World War II it became more widespread to honor servicemen from all wars, and the name was changed to Veterans Day in the US, and Rememberance day in the British Commonwealth. 

Anyhow, it is also the day after my father's death in 1993.Navy015.jpg He spent six years in the Naval Reserves. But with preperations for the wake and funeral, I found out from the funeral home that short term in the reserves does not make him a veteran in the eyes of the Goverment. No plot, no headstone, no honor guard, no flag. So, as we family decided on a closed casket, I supplied a casket flag from my collection. But the funeral home placed it on the casket the wrong way. So, after getting that fixed, I had to show the funeral home staff the proper way to display a flag on a closed casket as listed in the flag regulations. It was the early 1990s and they were just not having the experience anymore with military funerals.

In 1951, his summer cruise was on the USS Navarro APA 215, out of Norfolk, Va. where he got to load 40mm guns.  In 1952 he was on the USS Osberg, DE 538 (destroyer escort) out of Newport, RI where he was assigned to the 5-inch guns aft; and in the fall on the PC 1182 (sub chaser) out of New London, Conn. where they got to cruise down the East River (right past Astoria Park, near where dad lived at the time) into the Brooklyn Navy Yard.NavyMom.jpg

My dad's other activites in the Naval Reserve included a long trip to the Panama Canal, Panama City, Cristobal, Panama and Cartagena, Columbia in late June 1954. On that trip he brought home for his fiance (soon to be wife) a Panama 1 Balboa coin in a jewlery mount. I remember looking at that coin when I was a grammer school student, and Mom still has it.

However, the coolest photo group I have is of the reserve unit's Christmas Party on the training ship Praire State (The former Battleship USS Illinois, of the Great White Fleet fame), with my dad in uniform, my mom in a satin ball gown, and music by Burl Ives and the Bob Logan Band.NavyIves.jpg

In addition to what I rembember of my dad's stories of life aboard ship and his photo album, I have from his collection a lighter from the USS Osberg, and a water decal on metal car topper from the N.R. Surf. Div 3-79, NY.

No matter what else was in his wallet - up until the end, he always had a wedding photo and one of him working shipboard. He was proud of his time in uniform.

So, make sure you have your poppy on this week, and say thanks to a veteran.

George



11/11/2007 1:06:24 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, November 09, 2007
Days at the Bullion counter at Deak-Perera, 1980, part two
Posted by george

Working the Bullion counter at Deak-Perera was interesting.

Our store manager was George Parola and he was assisted by an older fellow named Jack. After the numismatic division was closed, George transfered to the Foerign Exchange office which was located in the concourse of the World Trade Center, still later he moved companies and is now with a Foreign Exchange office in the Rockefeller Center complex where he is still. Jack was a veteran of the 1950s and 1960s Nassau Street Coin and stamp shops, he later went to the Stamford, Conn. office.

We had our shipping clerk, Tom, who packed the registered boxes of daily Kuggerrand and Maple Leaf sales. The post office was located on the basement level, so he did not even have to brave the weather.

Eric was another young fellow, who had studied Zoology, but seemed destined to never work in the field. Sometime in the late 1980s he was working as a floor manager at Macy's flagship 34th Street store.

There were one or two others, and some were a bit odd at best.

Then there was the public.

Being by the passport office was a great location for foreign exchange, and the street store got lots of traffic, but sometimes folks would stop into the numismatic division by error. On one of the days, it was Tiny Tim.

It was interesting to learn the rules pertaining to cash transactions, tax implications on taking possession or having stuff mailed, and remembering not to set off the alarm by removing the last bill in the cash till.

Working with the public was exciting. On one ocassion I was buying 11 ounce pieces, thus getting near to the 10,000 cash reporting limit, from a well dressed husband and wife who said they were farmers in the upper Midwest. A day later he came in again with his wife for another transaction. Finally, on a third visit, this time alone, he confessed that his wife should not know about this third sale. But he felt it was time to cash out of gold and move into something else.

Mostly we had Maple leafs, and Kuggerrands (there was not an embargo on them as yet) On a lesser scale, British Sovereigns, French 20 Francs and German 20 Mark coins, then Austrian and several others.

On several occasions we had UN diplomats visit. They got to exchange gold to cash without limit. We just needed to photocopy their diplomatic identification. This lady and her escort asked to make use of our private room, and then she started to pile out 1, 2-1/2 and 5 pahlevi coins. Those were nice to see, and when all was said and done the Shah's daughter left with a large bit of cash.

Life and times in the big city.

George



11/9/2007 11:11:16 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, November 06, 2007
Yikes, Gold at 28 year high!
Posted by george

Okay, so gold today has gone over $825.00 an ounce, the highest since January 1980.

Boy, does that bring back memories. In 1980 I was at the ANS doing some research work on their transportation token collection when then curator of Modern Coins, Richard Doty received a call from the firm of Deak-Perera, looking for a fellow with some coin knowledge interested in working the counter of their 5th Avenue location. As I was there at the time, Doty recommeneded me, and within a week I had an interview, was getting a polygraph test, and figured out a college class schedule that was Tuesday-Thursday classes, leaving three days at the "office".

The midtown office was a first floor location opposite St. Patrick's Cathedral which did Foreign Exchange. The second floor office, just off the escalators from the lobby, was situated near the entrance to the New York Passport office. That second floor office handled the "Numismatic" trade, and Bullion.

In January it was crowded. People three and four deep at the counter. We has a front counter for gold and collector coins, and a side counter for silver, with a coin counter. The staff would be given price updates throughout the day, and we would buy or sell gold, and pay out in check or cash, up to the reporting limit of 10,000.

February, March, gold settled back. The office got quiet. April saw a two week NYC Subway Strike and a very quiet office.

By June, I was gone. Unemployed. However, I was soon back at the ANS, as a part-time photographic department clerk thru the rest of my college years.

I meet some fun people in that 5th Avenue office. Some I still see in the NYC numismatic scene, some I've never seen again, and others have gone onto their great reward. Including Mr. Nicholas Deak, who was shot in his 29 Broadway office in 1985.

What will gold do this time? I do not know, but it has brought back some fun memories for me.

George

 



11/6/2007 3:14:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, October 25, 2007
Iola kids get tokens as treats for Halloween !
Posted by george

What do you give for Trick or Treat?

 

Growing up in Astoria, NY, and living on the same block for my whole existence there, I was well known by many folks in the neighborhood, even at an early age. Apartment building doors were often opened, and with an older brother, his friends, and five cousins living down the street in an area filled with 6 to 60 family apartment buildings, the Halloween take of trick or treat candy would often be enormous. Coins too!

 

Since moving to Central Wisconsin, I decided not to give out candy. I have gone out of my way to give out “memorable” items. Sometimes that has been foreign coins - Canadian 5 cent pieces from the 1930s were a specialty one year – to California pinecones (you know the very very large kind), to sea shells – Hey kid, those are skeletons!,  (“way coooool Mr. Cuhaj is giving out skeletons” they were heard to shout to their approaching friends.) The pine-cones and sea shells I bought at summer estate sales (the sea-shells amounted to over 35 pounds, for 25 dollars! – The California pinecones were two large garbage bags full, collected by an ex-crafter.)

 

Co-workers would question me the following Monday to see if the strange thing in their kids bucket came from me, yes, most of the time they did. (But seriously, folks in this town give creative items out, from comic books, to baseball cards)iola077.jpg

 

Since 2003, I have been in town for Halloween for the odd years only. I’ve given away a cast pewter token as my treat item. It is quarter sized, so the kids think they are getting something expensive, but as they leave and reach into their plastic pumpkin then reality sinks in as they read it. I remember one young fellow who was walking away saying to his mom, wow a quarter, well no…so the mom says, Well what does it say….It says, “Listen to your Parents”…then his mom replied “Well, I guess you got tricked!”

 

Using 2x2 inch Corian® sample blocks that I bought in quantity on a popular internet auction site, I’ve gotten them simply engraved at a local trophy shop. The obverse with a pumpkin and the legend: HALLOWEEN, IOLA, WIS., and a simple GC as the eyes. The reverse, I have developed a simple reminder phrase. Pewter can be melted in a Pyrex® container on an electric stove. I just an old table spoon as a ladle, just the right amount in a scoopful to fill the mold.

 

In 2003, I used “Be Good to Others”, in 2005: “Listen to your Parents” and for 2007 they will be getting “Choose Wisely.” The tokens are dated on the reverse. I cast about 325 each year. And each year I have been giving that many out!

 

For ten years some of my co-workers have warned me that my line of cedar trees will get egged or TPd, however, I think that making a simple token, similar to a pocket angel, has been a fun way to share the hobby with the next generation.

 

Oh, yes, I dress up too, but you’ll have to come into town to see that. The date for Iola is Sunday, October 28th from 2-4 in the afternoon. Be there or be square!

 

George



10/25/2007 9:01:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Posted by george

Tom Marringer’s Lord of the Rings Fantasy Coinage

 

With the revision of the fifth edition of Unusual World Coins now off to the printer, it is time to reflect for a moment on some of the stuff I have been exposed to during the production of this latest update of a ‘fun’ numismatic reference. Everyone wants a catalog for their stuff, even if it is out-of-the-ordinary stuff, UWC has provided that medium, and now with listings on the Web, www.numismaster.com does too! (via a subscription, thank you very much!).

 

As collectors of numismatic stuff, my co-editor Tom Michael and I often jump with both feet to support modern producers of UWC items. Yes, we do support the hobby we report on as book editors.farthing.jpg

 

Mention of coinage in books has always been a welcomed treat while reading.

 

However, seldom has only three references in a famous trilogy created such a wonderful group of fantasy coinage, sadly now ended due to legal issues.

 

Tom Marringer, of Springdale AR, operated as the Shire Post Mint. He created at first a system of rubber stamps and postage labels mimicking postage stamps from the Shire and other lands in the J.R.R. Tolkien series. In time this operation was expanded to the creation of coins for some of the different lands in the Lord of the Rings series. The Shire, Mordor, Elves, men of Dale, Gondor and even the dwarfs were all eventually represented. gondor.jpg

 

Sadly, there was a bit of a legal entanglement with the Tolkien Enterprises, the minting of LOTR material has now come to an end.

 

However, Tom does produce some items relating to other lands, such as Leif Erickson coinage from Vinland, items from Westeros, and a short series for Camelot and Arthur Pendragon.

 

George



10/23/2007 9:55:35 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]