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Original 1865 tintype of Custer by Matthew Brady brings $5,750 in Holabird s huge Feb. 11-15 auction
RENO, Nevada
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Original tintype of George Armstrong Custer in a non-political case, 3 ¼ inches by 3 ½ inches, taken in 1865 by Matthew Brady, the famous Civil War-era photographer ($5,750).
Holabird Western Americana Collections
RENO, Nev. â An 1862 Abraham Lincoln silver Peace Medal in About Uncirculated condition sold for $18,750, an original 1865 tintype of George Armstrong Custer from a photograph taken by the iconic Civil War-era photographer Matthew Brady rang up $5,750, and three scarce and historically significant ingots (two silver, one gold) brought a combined $86,792 in a five-day Sweetheart Express Auction held Feb. 11th-15th by Holabird Western Americana Collections.
Paul Matson | Other Voices
Recently two important buildings were destroyed by fire in downtown Nevada City: 414 and 416 Broad St. The first structure was a long-time single-family home and is a contributing building on the National Register of Historic Places. The second, a professional office building.
Nearly 100 buildings within the downtown Historic District are on the National Register because they have either an “association with events that have contributed significantly to history” or “they are an embodiment of distinct characteristics of a particular period, type of architecture or construction method.”
National Register status is a great distinction. The list is notably long for this small town: the Nevada Theatre, Miners Foundry, the Courthouse, two fire houses, City Hall, Ott’s Assay Office, two churches, National Exchange Hotel, South Yuba Canal Building, and on and on. The Register research was conducted by the late Nevada County historian Ed Tyson.
United States 1968-D Lincoln Cent
Coinage Act of 1965, speculators and coin collectors drew the ire of the
Mint, the
Treasury, and many members of
Congress who thought that the bustling coin hobby was to blame for the national coin shortage. Anybody who has studied a
Red Book will understand that the mintages for clad U.S. coins post-1964 dwarfed those of coins struck before. Had collectors truly been the primary cause of the shortage, then the Mint would have seen a return to normalcy as collector enthusiasm for contemporary issues faded as it did with the arrival of clad dimes, quarters, and half-dollars and their astronomically high mintages. Obviously, that’s not what happened.
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