Stack's Bowers Galleries

Spring 2022 Baltimore Auction  –  4 - 8 April 2022

Stack's Bowers Galleries, Spring 2022 Baltimore Auction

US Coins and Currency

Part 1: Mo, 04.04.2022, from 7:00 PM CEST
Part 2: Tu, 05.04.2022, from 6:00 PM CEST
Part 3: Tu, 05.04.2022, from 11:00 PM CEST
Part 4: Tu, 05.04.2022, from 11:00 PM CEST
Part 5: We, 06.04.2022, from 9:00 PM CEST
Part 6: Th, 07.04.2022, from 6:00 PM CEST
Part 7: Fr, 08.04.2022, from 12:00 AM CEST
The auction is closed.

Description

1805 Eccleston Medal. By Thomas Webb, for Daniel Eccleston. Musante GW-88, Baker-85. Bronze. MS-64 BN (NGC).

76 mm. An immensely attractive and high grade Eccleston medal. Deep copper-brown throughout with intermingled highlights of steel-olive. Subtle traces of faded red persist here and there in the fields, where soft prooflike reflectivity is also seen. A couple of trivial marks are evident in the center of the reverse, and they are noted solely for accuracy. Beautifully struck on an unusually nice flan with only minimal natural porosity that did not strike out of the cast planchet when the dies came together, far less than seen on many examples. The Eccleston medal is a classic early Washington piece and is beloved for its considerable size, elegant styling and still somewhat unexplained reverse design featuring a Native American and the legend, THIS LAND WAS OURS. Indeed, the intended message of the reverse design coupled with the sentiments toward Washington has been a matter of debate for a long time. Though it is frequently analyzed as sympathetic to the cause of the Native peoples who were becoming increasingly displaced, one must take care to not make judgements on early 19th century motifs through the lens of the present. The general is cuirassed in grand form on the obverse, the unmistakable image of a victor. When coupled with the sentiment of the central reverse, it is worth remembering that Washington himself wrote to the Cherokee to recommend that they essentially learn to live as whites did, for their own prosperity. In 1805, the institution of slavery was legal in the United States and Great Britain, and the British Empire would continue to exploit as many territories and indigenous peoples as possible around the world for decades to come. Native American policy in the United States was no better. This said, the thoughts of any individual might differ vastly from societal norms en vogue at any given time, and the fact that the Native American, the most profound loser of the American Revolution, would be acknowledged at all is probably highly significant. Unfortunately, Eccleston gave no clues in his own presentation letter that he sent to Thomas Jefferson with examples of the medal. In it he simply referred to the entire reverse as bearing "an American Indian with his bow and arrow, and an appropriate legend."

Descriptive collector tag included.

Estimate: $ 1500

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Price realized 1'500 USD
Starting price 1 USD
Estimate 1'500 USD
The auction is closed.
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