A humble 5-cent coin with a storied past is headed to auction and bidding is expected to top US$2 million a century after it was mysteriously minted.
The 1913 Liberty Head nickel is one of only five known to exist, but it’s the coin’s back story that adds to its cachet: It was surreptitiously and illegally cast, discovered in a car wreck that killed its owner, declared a fake, forgotten in a closet for decades and then found to be the real deal.
It is expected to fetch US$2.5 million or more when it goes on the auction block April 25 in suburban Chicago.
“Basically a coin with a story and a rarity will trump everything else,” said Douglas Mudd, curator of the American Numismatic Association Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado, which has held the coin for most of the past 10 years. He expects it could bring more than Heritage Auction’s estimate, perhaps US$4 million and even up to US$5 million.
“A lot of this is ego,” he said of collectors who could bid for it. “I have one of these and nobody else does.”
The sellers who will split the money equally are four Virginia siblings who never let the coin slip from their hands, even when it was deemed a fake.