Gold recovered from 1857 sunken ship

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Hiddendragon, May 5, 2014.

  1. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

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  3. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

  4. drathbun

    drathbun Well-Known Member

  5. mlov43

    mlov43 주화 수집가

    The lost gold on that ship caused the panic of 1857?

    Sheesh.
     
  6. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    Maybe a 5% cause. The loss strongly affected several New York banks, causing a contraction of credit.

    Read the long article in Wikipedia for a more balanced view.
     
  7. Slider

    Slider Member

    Interesting article, but this is complete BS:

    U.S. $20 Double Eagle coins fetch an average of $5,000 from collectors, Odyssey's chief operating officer Mark Gordon told Reuters last week.

    Sure, SOME double eagle coins fetch that much money and more. But representing it as an average is flat out wrong.
     
  8. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Would they be worth more if they were recovered from the sunken ship if they were certified as such?
     
  9. Slider

    Slider Member

    Perhaps, but I can easily buy a common date double eagle these days for $1500 to $1600. I can't imagine a "sunken treasure" slab is going to triple its value.
     
  10. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    The $1500 double eagle doesn't have any bragging rights...
     
  11. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Not a MS type 1 Liberty head double eagle you can't. The 1857 S is by far the most common one and that is only because of the SS Central America. I wouldn't be too surprised if that $5,000 average figure is correct.
     
  12. Slider

    Slider Member

    You're putting context to the quote that wasn't there - at least not in the article.
     
  13. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    Yes it is...the ship sank in 1857. The article is talking about those coins verses similar coins. The 1925 Double Eagle is not a similar coin and it doesn't command the same price. They didn't go out of their way to say "Double Eagles 1857 and older..." but a little common sense tells you that the gold coins on the ship were not common date St. Gaudens.
     
  14. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    Camaro, you are not making allowances for the Bermuda Triangle effect...:woot:
     
  15. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    Right...I forgot about that. My bad. o_O
     
  16. Slider

    Slider Member

    I overlooked that detail. My bad.
     
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