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robec1347

Member: Seasoned Veteran
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  1. Like
    robec1347 reacted to Mr_Spud in Follow the lead picture post.   
  2. Thanks
    robec1347 reacted to Mohawk in For the love of copper   
    It looks like a few of us who left a while ago are coming back.....welcome back to you, Robec!!
  3. Like
    robec1347 reacted to jtryka in Well, that was weird...   
    Agreed, it seemed like each time got worse after the second Morgan group, which I think was the smoothest experience of the dysfunctional bunch...
  4. Like
    robec1347 got a reaction from Mohawk in For the love of copper   
    Thank you @Coinbuf I appreciate that. 
  5. Like
    robec1347 reacted to leeg in Next comes the chapter on the Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary Celebration.   
    I continue with:

    Courtesy of The Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary, by Antonia H. Froendt, p. 64.

    Athore, son of the Timucuan king Saturiwa, showing Laudonnière the monument placed by Ribault. Wikipedia.
    Three of his children, Isaac, Henry and Rachel, the last of whom married Jean Mousnier de la Montagne, were among the earliest European inhabitants of New York. In an article in the New York Evening Post of September 19, 1922, Mr. Robert de Forest says that Jesse de Forest’s autograph petition of July 21, 1621, is still extant and that it is signed by 56 men, most of them heads of families, the whole number comprising 227 men, women and children. It was presented to the British Ambassador at The Hague. Sir Dudley Carlton, and transmitted to the British State Secretary.
  6. Like
    robec1347 reacted to leeg in Next comes the chapter on the Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary Celebration.   
    State of New York Governor’s Proclamation. Courtesy of The Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary, by Antonia H. Froendt, p. 43.
    “April 27 (1924) Set Aside As Huguenot Sunday
    Presbyterians of U. S. Will Commemorate Anniversary of First Colony
        Sunday, April 27, is to be recognized as Huguenot Sunday by the Presbyterian churches in the United States. All the ten thousand churches of that denomination are asked to co-operate on that date in making memorable the three hundredth anniversary of the coming to America of the first permanent Huguenot colony. Plans for the special committee of the Presbyterian General Assembly, consisting of Rev. Authur J. Brown, chairman; Rev. William H. Foulkes, Rev. John a. Marquis, Rev. H. G. Mendenhall and Rev. William S. Coffin.
        In a message issued to the entire 1,800,000 communicant membership of the Presbyterian Church, Dr. Brown says: ‘The colony consisted of thirty-two families of Walloons, all of the Reformed religion (Huguenots), most of them natives of what is now the Province of Halnaut, Belgium. They came to the Middle Atlantic States under the flag of the Dutch West India Company. The religious services instituted by them marked the beginning of the Reformed Church in America.
        ‘The Huguenot immigration during the early Colonial years has meant so much in the making of our Nation and in laying the foundation of its faith and character that it is eminently fitting indeed that the Protestant churches of America should commemorate the introduction of the Huguenot element into our national life. April 27 is the Sunday which has been set apart to inaugurate the tercentenary celebrations which will take place in Huguenot centres all over the country this spring.”2
     2 The Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News · Sat, Apr 12, 1924 · Page 26.
    “Six Weeks’ Commemoration Includes Celebration at Valley Forge
        NEW YORK, April 26.—Thousands of Protestant churches in the United States, France and Belgium tomorrow will commemorate with special services the 300th anniversary of the emigration of Huguenots and Walloons to America.

    Courtesy of The Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary, by Antonia H. Froendt, p. 62.
    The day will be officially observed as Huguenot-Walloon Sunday.
        Chief interest in the celebration, which is sponsored by the Huguenot-Walloon New Netherland Tercentenary Commission, centres in New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania and several Southern States, because of the part had by Huguenots and Walloons in their settlement.
        Huguenot-Walloon Sunday marks the beginning of a six weeks’ commemoration of the first Huguenot settlements in New York State and Middle Atlantic region. Ceremonies at Mayport and Jacksonville, Fla., on May 1, will open the celebration. At Mayport, site of the first Huguenot colony in America, a monument to Jean Ribaut, leader of the colony, will be unveiled. The colony, founded in 1562, was wiped out three years later by a Spanish massacre.
        The tercentenary party will move northward on May 5, stopping at Charleston, S. C., until May 8. The celebration will conclude with exercises at Valley Forge, Pa., New York City, Staten Island, Albany and New Platz, N. Y.”3
    3 The Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News/newspaper dot com· Sat, Apr 27, 1924 · Page 4.
     
     
     
     
  7. Like
    robec1347 reacted to leeg in Next comes the chapter on the Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary Celebration.   
    I provided a history lesson around the coin earlier. Now a history lesson around the events of the Tercentenary Celebrations.

    Seal of New Netherland. The Huguenot-Walloon New Netherland Commission (Instituted by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America), for the Celebration of the 300th anniversary of the Settling in New Netherland of Walloons (French and Belgium Huguenots) by the Dutch West India Company, in 1624. Courtesy of The Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary, by Antonia H. Froendt, p. 1. A book in my numismatic library.
        “. . . In 1924, from May 17 through 22, Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary celebrations were held in New York City. Among the activities paid for, at least in part, from the profit derived from the sale of the commemorative coins was the dedication of the National Huguenot Memorial Church at Huguenot Park, Staten Island, on the afternoon of May 18th. . . Admiral Gaspard de Coligny (1519-1572; who died 52 years before the settlement in question!) and William the Silent (1533-1584; first *stadtholder of the Netherlands, who had also been dead for a long while by the time of the 1624 settlement).  Both of these individuals were associated with Protestantism and the Calvinist church, a tenuous historical connection at best with the 1624 landing, although a brochure noted they were ‘champions of the Huguenots.’ Debate raged concerning the appropriateness of these portraits withy the reasonable conclusion that they were irrelevant to the subject being commemorated. The reverse bore a depiction of the ship Nieuq Nederland. Morgan’s models were subject to approval and modification by James Earle Fraser, and this was done.1“1
    * In the Low Countries, stadtholder (Dutch: stadhouder, Dutch pronunciation: [ˈstɑtˌɦʌudər]) was an office of steward, designated a medieval official and then a national leader.
        The title was used for the official tasked with maintaining peace and provincial order in the early Dutch Republic and, at times, became de facto head of state of the Dutch Republic during the 16th to 18th centuries, which was an effectively hereditary role. For the last half century of its existence, it became an officially hereditary role and thus a monarchy (though maintaining pretence) under Prince William IV. His son, Prince William V, was the last stadtholder of the republic, whose own son, King William I, became the first king of the Netherlands. The Dutch monarchy is only distantly related to the first stadtholder of the young Republic, William of Orange, the leader of the successful Dutch Revolt against the Spanish Empire, his line having died out with William III.
    1. The title stadtholder is roughly comparable to England's historic title Lord Lieutenant.
    See Taxay pp. 70-73, pages which also reprint an interesting letter from Fraser to Congressman Vestal, telling of the Mint’s hostile posture toward outside artists.
    1 Commemorative Coins of the United States; A Complete Encyclopedia, Q. David Bowers. Published by Bowers and Merena Galleries, Inc., Box 1224, Wolfeboro, NH 03894, 1991, p. 174.

    Courtesy of The Huguenot-Walloon Tercentenary, by Antonia H. Froendt, p. 44.
     
    “A small fort, which our people call Fort Orange’
    May 5, 2018 to December 31, 2021, ADIRONDACK HALL
        Fort Orange was the first permanent Dutch settlement in New Netherland, built as a trading post by the West India Company in 1624 at the location of present-day Albany along the Hudson River. Between 1624 and 1664, the fort’s role in the development of New Netherland changed—from a point of contact and trade between Native Americans and Europeans, to an enclosure with dwellings and private enterprises, and finally an abandoned space consumed by the development of Albany.
        Centuries later, Fort Orange on the surface had long disappeared. But in a six-month period in 1970 and 1971—just ahead of Interstate 787 construction—a small archaeology team from the State Historic Trust (predecessor to the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, or OPRHP), headed by Paul Huey and composed mostly of volunteers, made remarkable discoveries about life in the Dutch colony at Fort Orange. In 2016, a collection of 36,000 artifacts from Fort Orange was transferred from OPRHP to the New York State Museum.
        This exhibition examines the momentous discovery of Fort Orange and the lasting impact of events occurring there 400 years ago that shaped the character of the region, New York State, and the nation. The exhibition title is a quote taken from The New World by Johannes De Laet, a director of the Dutch West India Company, recorded in 1625. Select artifacts, film footage from the excavation, and four decades of historical and archaeological research are highlighted—including renderings of the fort by Historical Artist Len Tantillo. Dutch ceramics on loan from the Albany Institute of History & Art help bring life to the story.
        This exhibition is supported as part of the Dutch Culture USA program by the Consulate General of the Netherlands in New York and in partnership with Historic Albany Foundation. Special thanks to the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation for their support in promoting understanding of New York State history.”2 
    2 Courtesy of the New York State Museum.
  8. Like
    robec1347 reacted to AcesKings in For the love of silver   
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    robec1347 got a reaction from 124Spider in For the love of copper   
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    robec1347 reacted to jtryka in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    This one arrived in the mail yesterday.
     


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    robec1347 reacted to JBock in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
  13. Like
    robec1347 reacted to GBrad in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    Picked up this nice little Jeffy SMS at the Dalton Coin show along with two other Jefferson SMS 1965's and a 1966.  They are beautiful as well. I may post them up too.  I've compared this coin with PCGS Photograde examples and I'm thinking it is at least as good as MS67 if not a bit better.  As far as the reverse shows, in my pic, what looks like a lot of scratching on the center of the building, it is nowhere near like this with it in my hand, must have something to do with the lighting.  The strike of this one appears to be considerably sharper in its details than those pictured on Photograde and the color/toning is pretty much spot on (no photo color enhancements by me). And yes... my pictures are as big as pie plates but I'm still not sure how to make them smaller.  This obviously, and exponentially, shows every little slight imperfection that much more.... Just thought I'd share it with you guys.  Thanks.


  14. Like
    robec1347 reacted to Woods020 in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    I have complained before that more higher end coins never seem to be for sale on the marketplace between collectors. Well @Coinbuf was gracious enough to notify me of a nice 2 cent proof on the PCGS forum marketplace. I ended up getting if for what I think is a very reasonable price compared to auction results. 
     
    PF65+ CAM / CAC (green bean). 

  15. Like
    robec1347 reacted to rocket23 in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    The Holy Grail of numismatic coinage........
    https://www.pcgs.com/cert/35818871
  16. Like
    robec1347 reacted to Lem E in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
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    robec1347 reacted to dleonard-3 in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    Another "TOP POP" for the registry set.

  18. Like
    robec1347 reacted to leeg in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    Thanks all!
    Image of the coin in the holder:
     

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    robec1347 reacted to Walkerfan in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
  20. Like
    robec1347 reacted to leeg in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    For my Type Set:
     

  21. Like
    robec1347 reacted to GBrad in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    Here's my newest acquistion.  This has now been deemed "THE BOB ROSS QUARTER".... My young daughter picked it up off my truck console after school last week (yes.... I'm guilty of looking at coins while I'm sitting in the long car line waiting to pick up my little sweetheart each day) she looks at it and without hesitation she immediately said, "Look daddy..... they put Bob Ross on the back of a Quarter...". I couldn't help but agree with the resemblance, and her young mindset, (no disrespect meant to the figure depicted on the reverse) and I laughed myself to tears.  I do keep any and all ATB quarters that have horses on the reverse for her.  She LOVES horses.  Just thought I'd share such an innocent moment from daddy's little girl.

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    robec1347 reacted to Lem E in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
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    robec1347 got a reaction from RonnieR131 in For the love of silver   
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    robec1347 got a reaction from Alex in PA. in For the love of copper