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Rare gold doubloon sells for $7.4 million

This rare 1787 gold doubloon sold for one of the highest prices ever paid for a gold coin.
Wall Street firm makes purchase

NEW ORLEANS — An exceedingly rare 1787 gold Brasher doubloon has been sold for $7.4 million, one of the highest prices ever paid for a gold coin.

Blanchard and Co., the New Orleans-based coin and precious metals company that brokered the deal, told The Associated Press the doubloon was purchased by a Wall Street investment firm. Identities of the buyer and seller were not disclosed.

Minted by Ephraim Brasher, a goldsmith and neighbor of George Washington, the coin contains 26.66 grams of gold — slightly less than an ounce. Worth about $15 when it was minted, the gold value today would be more than $1,500.

It is the only known example of the doubloon with a distinctive hallmark punch on the eagle’s breast; five other known doubloons have a punch on the eagle’s left wing.

The Brasher doubloon is considered the first American-made gold coin denominated in dollars; the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia didn’t begin striking coins until the 1790s, and foreign coins of various currencies were in use in the nation’s early years.

At Blanchard’s New Orleans headquarters Friday, the doubloon sat sealed in a protective case on an office table surrounded by three armed guards. Elevators were shut off to the 19th floor of a downtown office building housing Blanchard’s offices, and doors inside the office were locked.

The coin, which is smaller than a half dollar but heavier, was to be delivered by armored vehicle to the buyer over the weekend.

Blanchard has brokered the sale of other extremely rare and valuable U.S. coins, including a 1913 Liberty Head nickel that sold for $3 million. The Brasher doubloon last changed hands in 2004 for $3 million.

About six weeks ago, the doubloon was sent to John Albanese of Certified Acceptance for grading and authentication. Albanese is a consulting partner for Blanchard and well-established in the coin grading field.

Albanese said he offered $5.5 million for the coin more than three years ago — and the offer was rejected.

Brasher made a small number of the doubloons and other coins that are believed to have been intended for circulation.

At that time, the nation had not yet established a currency standard.

The Brasher coin was called a doubloon because it is about the weight of a Spanish gold doubloon, a common coin in colonial America.

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