Territorial Gold Coins - California Issuers
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Throughout the ages, the lure of
gold has motivated man to brave almost any hazard in its quest. So it was
again in California in 1848 when the greatest gold rush in U.S. history began
with John Marshall’s discovery on the American River. Thousands of modern
Argonauts suffered the rigors of arduous journeys “around the Horn,”
through deadly Panamanian jungles or treks across the North American
continent. Nothing of this magnitude had been experienced before. But so much
gold came out of California that the precious yellow metal’s price fell
sharply against that of silver, resulting in what little silver coinage there
was disappearing from circulation. In the mining communities, however, with
the unprecedented influx of wealth seekers from around the globe, the problem
was even worse. Although there was plenty of money around—in the form of
gold dust and nuggets—an acute lack of coinage hampered commerce at every
turn.
A similar situation existed in
all the other early American gold mining regions, both before and after the
California strike. Despite their vast geographical differences, in all these
areas it was hazardous and costly to transport gold dust to the east coast for
assay and coining. Local economies were based largely on barter or the use of
“pinches” of gold dust, a notoriously inaccurate method. Branch mints were
sorely needed, but the federal government, due to a combination of
indifference, politics and sectional rivalries, refused to authorize a mint
for any of the gold mining areas. While the U.S. Constitution expressly
prohibited the states from issuing their own money, there was no law against
individuals doing so. Into this void stepped numerous private firms, each
producing coins and ingots known to numismatists as pioneer or territorial
issues. By the end of 1849 there were approximately eighteen such companies in
California, almost all located in the San Francisco area. Norris, Gregg and
Norris was the first of these concerns to issue coins. Norris produced
five-dollar coins, and virtually all of these were minted in Benicia, although
inscribed San Francisco. Only two pieces survive today that were struck in
Stockton. Norris fives are scarce, but occasionally an XF or AU specimen will
appear.
No doubt the most important name
among the early private California issues was that of Moffat & Co. John
Moffat and his three partners began striking five and ten-dollar gold coins in
1849 and continued until the end of 1853. Moffat’s reputation remained
unimpeachable throughout the era, and its coins passed at par with federal
coinage, the only privately minted coins to do so. When the company finally
closed its doors in December, 1853, its equipment was purchased by the San
Francisco Mint. Rare in mint state, Moffat coins are generally found in
circulated grades.
The only other firms among the
early issuers of California gold whose coins are occasionally seen today are
the Miners Bank and Baldwin & Co. Miners Bank ten-dollar coins were
crudely manufactured, struck using the ancient hammer method, as coining
presses were unavailable at the time. Baldwin & Co. issued fives and tens
in 1850, adding twenties the following year. Other gold coin issuers in
1849-50 include such names as J.H. Bowie, Cincinnati Mining & Trading Co.,
Dubosq & Co., Massachusetts and California Co., J.S. Ormsby, Pacific
Company and Shultz & Co. Surviving examples from all these firms are great
rarities today, not because so few were struck, but rather because of
widespread melting in the early 1850s. Interestingly, their high attrition
rate is almost solely attributable to one man, James King of William.
King was a banker, originally
from the Washington, D.C. area, who gave himself the title “of William” to
distinguish himself from several other James Kings in the region. In March,
1851, King sent a group of private territorial gold coins to Augustus Humbert,
United States Assayer at the time. The assay showed that the coins contained
97-99% of their stated value. King sent the results to the local newspapers,
and the negative publicity created a panic. Local bullion dealers and bankers,
including King, refused to accept most private coins for more than 80 cents on
the dollar. Many people sold at this ridiculous price. King and others
fortunate enough to purchase pieces at this deep discount made huge profits by
reselling the coins to Humbert who turned them into $50 Assay Office
“slugs.” The coins specifically targeted by King’s assaying scheme were
from the three firms of Baldwin, Schultz, and Dubosq, but all the other
private concerns (except Moffat) suffered from guilt by association, and their
coins were widely melted. As a result, most early California territorial
issues are extremely rare.
Although Congress failed to
authorize a branch mint for San Francisco, in 1850, as a stop-gap measure, it
approved an Assay Office in its stead. The government contract to produce
fifty-dollar ingots was awarded to Moffat & Co. with Augustus Humbert as
U.S. Assayer. In 1851, the management team of Moffat and Humbert struck the
impressive octagonal fifty-dollar gold pieces with their “engine turned”
reverses. After James King’s intrigues effectively stopped further private
production of small denomination coins, in March, 1851, Moffat petitioned the
federal government for permission to issue pieces smaller than the
fifty-dollar “slugs.” For political reasons, permission was at first
denied, as this would have turned the Assay Office into a de facto mint. The
following year, however, the Treasury Department relented, and the Assay
Office minted ten and twenty-dollar coins in 1852 and 1853. After Moffat
retired in February, 1852, the Assay Office contract was taken over by his
former partners, Curtis, Perry & Ward. In December, 1853, the U. S. Assay
Office was closed to make way for the new San Francisco Mint. Unlike the other
private issues, the semi-official Assay Office coins never suffered from
widespread melting, and many examples survive to this day. At one time, two
collectors, George Walton and John A. Beck, each accumulated more than one
hundred of the fifty-dollar “slugs.”
The lack of refining acids on the
west coast was a consistent theme for all California gold producers. Because
of the naturally occurring high gold content found in California ore, most
Gold Rush coinage was struck without alloy. This produced coins that varied in
fineness between 850 and 925 thousandths. The U.S. Mint, however, could not
tolerate a variable standard: by law, U.S. gold coins had to be .900 fine. But
the lack of parting acids necessary to operate a branch mint delayed that
institution's opening until 1854, and even after production officially began,
coining operations were periodically suspended when refining acids became
scarce again. The daily needs for coinage continued, however, but by 1854,
most small denomination gold coins had been melted. Into this void stepped two
highly reputable firms, Wass, Molitor & Co. and Kellogg & Co.
Wass and Molitor were two
Hungarian immigrants who established an assay office in San Francisco in 1851.
With a reputation for scrupulous honesty second only to John Moffat’s, the
two men issued five and ten-dollar pieces in 1852. When the Assay Office and
later the federal mint began striking their own gold coins, Wass and Molitor
ceased their coining operations. But when the newly opened mint failed to
produce enough coinage to satisfy demand and then closed in 1855 because of a
lack of parting acids, local bankers and merchants petitioned the firm to
resume production. Obliging, they issued ten, twenty, and fifty-dollar gold
pieces in 1855. Although the San Francisco Mint rated the coins from Wass,
Molitor at full face value, most were nevertheless melted and converted into
federal gold. Today Wass, Molitor pieces are among the most highly coveted of
all territorial issues.
Another individual asked by local
bankers to produce coinage was John Kellogg, a former cashier for Moffat &
Co. While only in operation for two years, 1854 and ‘55, Kellogg & Co.
produced more than six million dollars in gold coinage. Today, the Kellogg
twenties are among the more available California territorial issues. This is
due in part to the large number produced, but also because of a hoard of 58
pieces found in Thayer County, Nebraska in 1907. Allegedly, two ranchers hid
the coins while being pursued by hostile Indians in 1867. They were presumably
killed, as the coins were found by two boys playing in the woods near
Alexandria, Nebraska forty years later. Most high grade Kellogg twenties known
today come from this hoard.
The few territorial gold issues
that survive today are token reminders of a pivotal time in U.S. history, a
time when initiative in the private sector was absolutely necessary for
economic survival, and even the simplest monetary requirements had to be met
locally rather than by a federal government thousands of miles away. While the
private firms lasted only a few years, the crucial function they served in
people’s everyday lives made development possible and aided in the economic
growth of the nation at large. The final curtain came down on private coinage
with Congress’ passage of the Act of June 8, 1864. Intended to stop the
minting of Civil War tokens, this legislation prohibited the private
manufacture of any coins designed to pass as money.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's
Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New
York, 1988. Eckfeldt, Jacob R. & Du Bois,
William E., New Varieties of Gold and Silver Coins, Counterfeit Coins, and
Bullion, George P. Putnam, New York, 1851. Kagin, Donald, Private Gold Coins
and Patterns of the United States, Arco, New York, 1981. Taxay, Don, The Comprehensive
Catalogue and Encyclopedia of U.S. Coins, Scott Publishing Co., New York,
1975. |
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From the NGC Photo Proof Series. Copyright © 2001 The Numismatic Guaranty Corporation. All rights reserved. |
