6/3/25 1:41 PM
Gold: $3,351.94
Silver: $34.54
Platinum: $1,076.28
Palladium: $1,009.60
G/S: 97.04
Pt/G: 0.32
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Anti-Theft Measures

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Upcoming Auction Highlights

  • The Midwest Summer Sale 2025    View Lots
  • 7/18/2025 - Saint Charles Convention Center
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  • See the Auction Schedule for complete details.
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  • Lot #177 - 1918 $50 St. Louis Fr# 831 - PMG F-15 minor repairs
  • US Currency-Federal Reserve Bank Notes, Large
  • Flat Creek, Missouri Collection. PMG has seen a grand total of only fifteen of Fr.831 -- not such a big surprise since St. Louis was the only district to release these FRBNs to circulation to the extent of only 4-thousand pieces. That said, the majority remain non-certified since over fifty examples are believed to currently exist. Interestingly, this note has a relatively high serial number by comparison to the very low emission. Regardless, the fact that about a quarter of all known notes are in museums means those very few that have ever been sold on the open market tend to remain impounded as a single-Friedberg type. Very decent margins surround this originally toned and choice example the "minor repairs" being closure of a couple of small edge splits.
 

Previous Auction Highlights

  • The Collectors' Auction    View Lots
  • 11/1/2024 - Saint Charles Convention Center
  • Download Auction Prices Realized
  • Lot #751 - 1818/5 NGC MS-63
  • Hammer: $4,000
  • Quarter Dollars-Capped Bust
  • Robert Michaels Collection. Browning-1. One of the most outrageous coins to exist is the Newman example of this same die-marriage graded NGC MS-67 "star"... but it likely costs a third of a million dollars today. For everyone else, there are nicer choice UNC examples like the present salmon-grey specimen also certified by NGC. The surface seems immaculate -- certainly less bagmarked than one expects of the grade while an impressive strike brings up all of the stars as well as intriguing clash marks strewn into the fields. Minimal planchet striations over the lower bust are likely adjustment marks but they were mostly ironed out by the excellent strike. In this die state, all that remains visible of the underdigit is a small diagonal in the upper loop of "8" and a tiny remnant of the vertical part of the flag adhering to the left.
 

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G/S: 97.04  Pt/G: 0.32

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