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The extremely rare 1852 Cracked Die Adelaide Pound (Type I)


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The extremely rare 1852 Cracked Die Adelaide Pound (Type I)
COIN
The extremely rare 1852 Cracked Die Adelaide Pound (Type I)
PRICE
$95,000
STATUS
Available now
QUALITY
Extremely Fine with strong detail in the central area of the design
PROVENANCE
The Dan Collection
COMMENTS
This coin is priced to bring ownership of the famous 1852 Cracked Die Adelaide Pound into reach of a wide collector audience. But the story of this coin is not just about the price. This coin succeeds where other Cracked Dies do not. The edges and the crown are simultaneously strong, so too the ‘N’ in the value ONE on the reverse. It is simply a Cracked Die that delivers value for your investment dollars. Die-sinker Joshua Payne faced a genuine dilemma when he began production of the 1852 Adelaide Pound. Increase the pressure on the edge of the dies and you get the perfect edge but a weak crown. Reduce the pressure on the edge and you get weak edges and a strong crown. And that is why the strike on this coin is so remarkable, strong edges and strong crown. The Cracked Die is a grand rarity, with a wonderful narrative. It is the nation’s first gold coin struck in the very first production run. It also is extremely rare with less than forty examples known today. The technical shots shown below re-affirm the quality of the strike and the state of the fields.
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The decision that created an iconic rarity.

How would today's collectors react if Governor Lachlan Macquarie had produced the first forty Holey Dollars with a style that made them undeniably connected to the very first production run of Australia's first coins.

Ecstatic, I would have thought.

Unwittingly that is exactly what die sinker and engraver Joshua Payne did when he set up the dies and commenced production of the nation's first gold coin at the Government Assay Office, Adelaide.

The reverse die, with its simple, elegant beaded inner circle cracked, the mishap discovered after forty-plus coins were produced. And then, when he swapped over the reverse die, he replaced it with one that had a completely different design.

Joshua Payne's actions unknowingly created a rarity of the highest order, the 1852 Adelaide Pound Type I, struck during the very first production run of the nation's first gold coin.

Defined by the reverse with the beaded inner circle and the tell-tale crack in the DWT area of the legend, perhaps forty examples are known.

 


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Strength in the edges. But also strength in the 'VALUE ONE POUND' detail. Most Type I Adelaide Pounds show weakness in the inner design area, this coin the exception. 

Minted in the very first production run of coins

We know that this Adelaide Pound was minted during the very first production run, if not the first day then at the very least the first week.

So how can we be so sure?

Adelaide Pounds from the first production run were struck using a reverse die that had a simple, elegant beaded inner circle.

The coins also reflect the disaster that occurred during those very first few hours of production, when the reverse die cracked in the DWT section of the legend. When the mishap was discovered, minting was temporarily halted.

The cracked reverse die was replaced. The critical point being that the new reverse die had a different design. More intricate, it featured a scalloped inner border abutting a beaded inner circle. (The reverse design mirrored the crown obverse design.)

Extremely rare and highly prestigious

Less than forty Adelaide Pounds out of the first production run survive today making it one of the least available of Australia's classic coin rarities.

There was an upside to the disaster that occurred during the first production run of Adelaide Pounds. While the pressure exerted on the edges cracked the reverse die, that same pressure resulted in the coin having almost perfect edges, beautiful strong denticles framing the central crown design.

There is another upside to the cracking disaster. Because the coin was considered 'imperfect' very few examples were put aside as souvenirs, making high quality Type I Adelaide Pounds extremely scarce.

Most Type I Adelaide Pounds have circulated with the biggest proportion, more than fifty per cent, well circulated and in a quality level of poor to Good Very Fine. And far below the quality level offered here.

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Strength in the edges. But also strength in the detail of the crown. Most Type I Adelaide Pounds show weakness in the crown area, this coin the absolute exception. 

A special place in Australia's history

The 1852 Adelaide Pound holds a very special place in Australia's history as the nation's first gold coin. It was minted in November 1852 at the Government Assay Office, Adelaide using gold that had been brought from the Victorian gold fields.

Minted by authority of the Bullion Act of 1852, coin production commenced in November of that year and finished in February 1853 when the Act expired. South Australia produced just over 24,000 coins in that short three-month time-frame.

The Assay office had opened months earlier on 10 February 1852, its sole purpose to assay gold nuggets brought from the Victorian goldfields and to re-shape them into ingots. No minting expertise was required in the casting of the ingots. While they conformed to a shape and style, they were crude and rough and ready and each had its own unique shape and size depending on the weight of gold assayed.

Nine months later, following agitation from Adelaide’s business community, legislation was passed that authorised the Government Assay Office to strike gold coins.

Suddenly precision was required. The design was intricate, created by colonial die-sinker and engraver, Joshua Payne. So, it was always going to be a tough ask for a factory to start churning out currency to a defined weight and design.

The intention was that the Adelaide Pound would circulate. And be used in every day commercial transactions, as part of a grand plan by South Australia's Governor, Sir Henry Young, to stimulate his state's ailing economy. The coin was never given kid gloves treatment during the production process.

It was struck in what can only be described as a factory, hammered out and hurled down an assembly line, more than likely into a barrel or bucket.

This coin survived the production process, underwent minimal circulation and has lustre on both obverse and reverse. It is a remarkable piece of colonial Australia.

 

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