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Stack's Bowers & Ponterio
April 2018 Hong Kong Auction - Sess. A-E  2-4 Apr 2018
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Lot 50394

Starting price: 24 000 USD
Lot unsold
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CHINA. Gold Standard Pattern Dollar with Plain Edge, Dated Year 18, Struck in 1932. NGC MS-62 BN.
L&M-928; K-Plate 224; Y-unlisted; WS-unlisted; Wenchao-pg. 728 #1158 (rarity four stars); Shanghai Museum-Mr. Shi Jiagan's Collection-pg. 131 #607 & 608; Sun-III-5-11 (plate coin). Struck in bronze. The unadopted Gold Standard Dollar gives testament to China's struggles to find a workable financial policy in the decades following the 1911 Revolution and the ensuing travails during the drive towards full unification. In an effort to find this elusive solution the Nanking Government invited foreign economists to give a detailed report on the state of Chinese finances and offer recommendations on policy change and fiscal structure. This overview was known as the Kemmerer Report and advocated the gradual introduction of coins issued on the gold standard with the design similar to the already circulating Sun Yat-sen "Junk" Dollars with the monetary unit and its fractions known as "1 Sun, 1/2 Sun, etc.". The commission brought in by the Nanking Government was headed by world renowned "Money Doctor" Professor Edwin Kemmerer. In the early 1900's Kemmerer had been appointed as the Financial Advisor to the United States Philippine Commission and as an outspoken advocate and ardent defender of the gold standard he developed the plan which placed the Philippine monetary system under it. Throughout the 1910's and '20s Kemmerer worked alternately as professor at Cornell and Princeton and as an economic advisor to several countries, predominantly in Central and South America. Eventually he became the leader of advisory commissions which allowed for much more in depth analysis and recommendation, as was done in the case of the Kemmerer Commission which was summoned to China in the autumn of 1929 and did not deliver its final report until late autumn of 1930. This report was not released to the public until May of the following year, after which the order for dies and trials were placed (with the intention of dating them to 1929). The U.S. Mint at Philadelphia was contracted to produce the dies for the proposed "Sun" units which maintained the overall appearance of the concurrent "Birds over Junk" Dollars with modifications to the reverse design. Prepared by the then Chief Engraver John Sinnock the modified design has moved the three geese from soaring over the junk to skimming along the water just below it. This modification may coincide with the removal of the geese altogether from the design of the regular Dollars of 1933 as according to Kann, "Because the rising sun might have been confounded with the national emblem of Japan, and the wild geese likened to oncoming Japanese warplanes". Additionally a legend was added stating, "Gold Standard Currency One Dollar" in place of the simple denomination, "One Yuan". The subsequent fractional "Suns" share these design elements with of course the appropriate changes to the denominations. Once the dies were prepared a small trial run of pieces were struck and along with the dies were shipped to Shanghai where famed mechanical engineer Clifford Hewitt had established a new modern mint, having been under contract by the Chinese government since 1920 following the opening of the Manila Mint which he helped set up. This piece is identified by most references as a "Mint Sport" with the obverse design of the 1929 Sun Yat-sen pattern pieces and the reverse of the aforementioned "Gold Standard" Junk design. Still maintaining luster in the protected areas and showing few signs of handling, this piece is a wondrous rarity of type and condition. Though the gold standard project never came to fruition this mint sport and the few pieces which exist have been coveted numismatic rarities practically since they were struck. NGC MS-62 BN.

Estimate: $40000.00- $50000.00
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