- U.S. Coins /
- Dollars /
- Draped Bust Dollars (1795–1803) /
- 1796 $1 Small Date, Small Letters, B-3, BB-62 MS
1796 $1 Small Date, Small Letters, B-3, BB-62 MS
1796 Draped Bust Silver Dollar. BB-62, B-3. Rarity-7+. Small Date, Small Letters. AU-55 (PCGS). CAC.
Source: Stacks Bowers
1796 Draped Bust Silver Dollar. BB-62, B-3. Rarity-7+. Small Date, Small Letters. AU-55 (PCGS). CAC.
Source: Stacks Bowers
1796 Draped Bust Silver Dollar. BB-62, B-3. Rarity-7+. Small Date, Small Letters. AU-55 (PCGS). CAC.
Source: Stacks Bowers
Greysheet Catalog Details (GSID: 199114) The variety now known as Bowers-Borckardt 62 is a celebrated rarity in the Draped Bust series. Although first described by John W. Haseltine in his 1881 Type Table, where it was listed as H-3, the muddled fashion with which the dies were described combined with the extreme rarity of examples led many numismatists to doubt this variety's existence. More than half a century later, in 1950, M.H. Bolender reported, "While many 1796 dollars have been listed as H-3, this has been erroneously done. I have purchased a dozen or more H-3s, every one of them wrongly attributed." Even so, he reported that three specimens were known, which must represent coins whose verbal report he considered reliable; his own reference collection lacked an example, forcing him to use a composite image in his early dollar book. Only in 1959 was this variety - now widely known as Bolender-3 - positively identified and illustrated using a confirmed example. Over the ensuing 42 years only one other example surfaced, in 2001, and the census of 1796 B-3 dollars would remain at just two specimens for nearly a quarter century thereafter. When Harry E. Salyards published his reference Eagle Poised on a Bank of Clouds: The United States Silver Dollars of 1795-1798 in 2022, he took on the issue of whether additional examples of this variety - known as BB-62 since the 1993 publication of Q. David Bowers' silver dollar Encyclopedia - were awaiting attribution in old collections. In the author's words: Do Other Examples of BB-62 Exist, Unrecognized? Stack's 2001 catalog listing raised the question, answering it with a tentative "We suspect [so]." Since it is one among three Small Date / Small Letters varieties dated 1796, that is certainly possible, for it requires actual die variety attribution for identification. To any non-numismatist owning an "old silver dollar" that has been passed down in the family from generation to generation, the very concept that coins of the same date might have been made with differently engraved dies would never occur. A collector of dollars by Redbook variety might have one filling the Small Date / Small Letters slot, without realizing that it was the "excessively rare" one, as Stack's put it in 1959. It could even exist as a generic 1796, encapsulated by either of the major third party grading services - remember, die variety identification is by request only. Finally, its identification suffered from 78 years of ambiguous verbal descriptions, before an actual illustration of the coin appeared in print [in 1959] - in a source that was not widely disseminated. Salyards' discussion proved unusually timely, for since January 2024 two (!) additional examples of the 1796 BB-62 dollar have surfaced, bringing the census to four specimens, as follows: 1 - PCGS AU-55. CAC.The present example, consigned to us uncertified and unattributed, and subsequently graded by PCGS and verified by CAC for the first time ahead of this sale. It is now far and away the finest known 1796 BB-62 Draped Bust dollar. (See below for additional discussion.) 2 - PCGS EF-45+. Ex our (Stack's) sale of the Philip G. Straus Collection, May 1959, lot 2065; W. Earl Spies; our (Stack's) sale of the W. Earl Spies Collection, December 1974, lot 24; our (Stack's) 68h Anniversary Sale, October 2003, lot 2715; Warren Miller Collection. This coin was previously certified AU-53 by NGC as part of the Miller Collection, which certification is still listed in the NGC Census. It is the first 1796 BB-62 dollar positively confirmed to exist. 3 - PCGS Fine-15. Ex our (Stack's) sale of the Cornelius Vermeule III Collection, September 2001 (actually sold November 2001, due to the 9/11 terrorist attacks), lot 421; Warren Miller, sold privately to the following, as NGC VF-25; Ira & Larry Goldberg's sale of the Dr. Robert Hesselgesser Collection, September 2011 Pre-Long Beach Auction, lot 5024, as PCGS Fine-15; Ira & Larry Goldberg's Pre-Long Beach Auction of May 2012, lot 1273, as PCGS Fine-15. The second positively confirmed 1796 BB-62, and the first since 1959. 4 - NGC VF Details--Scratches. Ex Heritage's FUN Signature Auction of January 2024, lot 4089. This is the third 1796 BB-62 dollar positively confirmed and, according to the Heritage cataloger, "is from an old-time collection of early dollars (not the Dr. Stark Collection) that was consigned for the FUN auction." As the foregoing list makes clear, this variety was missing from such notable early dollar variety collections as Ostheimer, Gilhousen, Willasch and Reiver, in addition to Bolender. It has kept out of sight so well that many specialists have never even seen an example and, despite the 1959 and 1974 sales of the Straus-Spies specimen, the fifth edition of the Bolender early dollar reference published in 1988 stated, "Most experts now question whether this variety actually exists."
Obverse: Liberty is portrayed with a so-called "draped bust," facing right, with her hair tied back with a ribbon. She is flanked by stars on the left and right periphery with the word LIBERTY on top, and the date positioned at the bottom.
Reverse: The so-called "small eagle" is portrayed standing atop rocks motif in the center with wings fully surrounded by an olive wreath that is tied by a ribbon into a bow at the bottom. The words UNITED STATES OF AMERICA around the periphery. The denomination is spelled out as a fraction of "1/2" at the bottom, under the bow.
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