Numismatic News

Bass Collection of Gold to Be Auctioned by Heritage

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Heritage Auctions announced July 13 that it has been selected to offer one of the most revered and valuable rare-coin collection­s in numismatic­s history: The Harry Bass Core Collection. The historic assemblage of some of the rarest U.S. gold coins and die patterns is estimated to be worth more than $60 million, and proceeds from its sale will benefit the dozens of Dallasbase­d non-profits supported by the Harry W. Bass Jr. Foundation with a particular emphasis on early childhood education and literacy in Dallas.

The collection, which the late Dallas oilman and philanthro­pist Harry W. Bass Jr. began assembling in the 1960s, has been on display at the American Numismatic Associatio­n’s ( ANA) Edward C. Rochette Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colo., since October 2000. Earlier this year, the foundation’s trustees voted to sell the collection, which contains some 450 U.S. gold coins dating to the late 1700s, to increase its annual giving – from $2 million to at least $5 million each year, depending on the auction’s final results.

“We’ve had to say no to so many deserving groups, and with the sale of this collection, we can now expand our funding and reach a lot more people,” said F. David Calhoun, executive director of the Harry W. Bass Jr. Foundation. “The pandemic has exposed how much need there is. It has been a very trying and challengin­g time for the non-profit sector, especially in education, and it has magnified many times the needs of the under-served population­s of Dallas.”

In April, the foundation announced it would be removing its assemblage, which includes the only complete $3 gold coin collection, from the ANA museum and deaccessio­ning it to increase its philanthro­pic efforts in Dallas. The board of trustees hired Profession­al Coin Grading Service (PCGS) co-founder and numismatic­s expert John Dannreuthe­r to manage the collection’s sale, including selecting an auction house and thirdparty graders.

Heritage Auctions was among several internatio­nally renowned auction houses vying for the collection. Heritage was awarded the assemblage in early July and will offer The Harry Bass Core Collection in a series of auctions over the next year, beginning in the fall.

All the coins in the Bass Collection have been unavailabl­e for decades; indeed, many trace their lineage to the heralded auction of Louis E. Eliasberg Sr.’s gold coin collection in 1982. All are uncertifie­d or ungraded. Heritage will now request proposals from PCGS, Numismatic Guaranty Company and Certified Acceptance Corporatio­n to handle the grading and assist with marketing this world-renowned collection.

Executive Vice President Todd Imhof led Heritage’s efforts.

“We worked very hard to present a creative and enticing proposal to the Bass Foundation’s trustees and are grateful and honored to have been selected, especially since the sale proceeds will stay here in Heritage’s hometown,” Imhof says. “For many decades, the foundation and its trustees have been remarkable stewards and custodians of this incredible collection. And their generosity has benefitted untold thousands.”

Since the 1990s, the Harry W. Bass Jr. Foundation has supported qualified 501(c) (3) organizati­ons throughout Dallas, primarily focusing on youth and education. Among its more than four-dozen recipients, the foundation counts Frazier Revitaliza­tion in South Dallas, Head Start of Greater Dallas, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas, the Momentous Institute, Bachman Lake Together in Northwest Dallas and Readers 2 Leaders in West Dallas. But the foundation also helps feed the hungry through such non-profits as Crossroads Community Services (which provides nutritiona­l assistance for at-risk children in Dallas County), and it supports Austin Street Center’s work with Dallas’ unsheltere­d.

“The pandemic was a giant paradigm shift regarding our outlook on the future,” Calhoun said. “There is just so much need. In 2020 we diverted more than half of the annual funding to food-oriented organizati­ons – and they used every cent of it. Late that year, we started discussing deaccessio­ning the collection, and we made the decision this year. It was a slow process, but ultimately, we asked ourselves: How many more organizati­ons can we fund? How many more lives can we positively impact? And that’s exciting to think about.”

Heritage President Greg Rohan said, “This was a complex and competitiv­e situation, and we’re extraordin­arily proud of the work Todd did in helping us make sure the Bass Collection remained in Harry’s hometown. Of course, our real work is just beginning, and our team is excited about what’s to come.”

 ?? (Images courtesy Harry W. Bass, Jr. Foundation via Heritage Auctions.) ?? Obverse of a 1907 Extremely High Relief Saint-Gaudens double eagle gold coin (top) and reverse of an 1877 “half union” $50 gold coin from the Harry Bass Core Collection.
(Images courtesy Harry W. Bass, Jr. Foundation via Heritage Auctions.) Obverse of a 1907 Extremely High Relief Saint-Gaudens double eagle gold coin (top) and reverse of an 1877 “half union” $50 gold coin from the Harry Bass Core Collection.

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