Labor Day Sales! Standout Numismatic Rarities 352
By Key Date Coins
Sep 8, 2024
148 Route 73 Suite 3-184 Voorhees, NJ 08043 USA, United States

ALL $1 OPENINGS! EVERY SINGLE LOT IS STARTING AT $1!

We are very excited to present our 600 LOT Saturday-Sunday Labor Day Sales, Standout Numismatic Rarities Auction! This is a NOT TO BE MISSED event!

To celebrate Labor Day, We will be offering EVERYONE a 2% Buyers Premium Discount off the hammer if you hammer over $5,000 over the 2 days! To get this offer, you must text Kyleigh at (856)-443-4672 with the words “35.2 Premium", your name, and platform you bid with. (This is for invoicing purposes to ensure the promo is reflected!)

We are ALSO offering FREE SHIPPING for everyone who hammers over $500!

Join us live on Saturday, 9/7 - Sunday 9/8 at 7:30pm ET with Corey!

PREBIDDING OPEN NOW! ALL LOTS STARTING AT $1!

This Auction Features:

- Ultra Rare Currency

- An Extensive, high end, Morgan and Peace Dollar Collection featuring all Key Dates

- High Grade Commemoratives

- SO MUCH GOLD, $1, $2.5, $5, $10, and $20 of all types

- And SO MUCH More

Every auction has something for everyone, there is always a bargain to be had! We put together the highest quality items in the bullion, coins, currency, and exonumia categories. From large estates to small estates, consignments from around the country, we have it all! We have every type of rare estate that almost every auction has something you will never see again! Ranging from Morgans and Rare Gold to VAMS and Varieties to Currency and Proof Sets, there really is something for every kind of bidder.

We will auction lots 5761-6120 on Day and 6121-6480 on Day 2

This auction is built of entirely high value lots that will be auctioned off by Corey and Sandi

Please Note, per our deal with the consignee, this auction needs to be paid within 72 hours of Invoicing. We accept credit card or wire on invoices below $5000 and only check or wire on invoices $5000+

We can't wait to see you at the auction! 

More details
The auction has ended

LOT 5789:

1880-s Morgan Dollar RARE REDFIELD Hoard $1 ms65 Paramount

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Sold for: $400
Start price:
$ 5
Estimated price :
$400 - $800
Buyer's Premium: 18%
Auction took place on Sep 8, 2024 at Key Date Coins
tags:

1880-s Morgan Dollar RARE REDFIELD Hoard $1 ms65 Paramount
1880-s RARE REDFIELD Hoard Morgan Dollar $1 ms65 Paramount. Lavere Redfield was an eccentric, savvy investor in stocks and real estate. He made his fortune through shrewd investments. When he died, a massive treasure trove of silver dollars was discovered in his Nevada home. The Redfield collection is indeed one of the largest treasures of Morgan dollars found in the United States and is now the delight of many numismatists.Numismatist Lavere RedfieldThe collection of a lifetimeLavere Redfield was an American businessman, landowner, numismatist, roulette player and philanthropist. He was born into poverty in October 1897 in Utah and moved to Idaho shortly after World War I, where he worked as a potato farmer and store manager. Ten years later, at the beginning of the Great Depression, he moved to Los Angeles.Upon his arrival in California, he decided to invest his savings and began buying unwanted stocks at a low price. He apparently had a knack for picking the right investments and eventually made a fortune.In 1935, he bought a farmland and a large stone house in Reno. With his wife Nell, they were part of the wave of millionaires courted by the state of Nevada, which claimed no taxes.Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, Redfield would procure bags of silver dollars and store them in the basement of his home. He would go to the bank to buy $1,000 bags and bring them back in his car himself.Redfield’s treasure: a hidden fortuneHating banks and paper money, as well as the government, Redfield chose to keep his treasure in his own home. In 1960, he was convicted of tax fraud by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the U.S. federal government agency that collects income and other taxes. He preferred to serve an 18-month sentence in federal prison rather than pay his debts. Upon his release, he returned to Reno and continued to accumulate silver dollars.In order to remain inconspicuous, he walked around town poorly dressed. Redfield would sometimes walk from his Forest Street mansion to downtown Reno, while he owned numerous vehicles. It was never clear whether he didn’t want to spend his money or whether he preferred to keep a low profile. He reportedly begged Rollan Melton, the publisher of the local newspaper, the Reno Evening Gazette, not to publish his picture, so that people would not know what he looked like.However, rumors spread quickly. There were many attempts to rob him and to break into his house. No one ever got their hands on his treasure of millions of dollars, hidden in the false walls of his house A Key Date's Pick, Bid to Win, Don't let it get Away Coin

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