Western Americana Delivers Holabird Pioneers & Patriots Auction Featured 1,700 Lots
April 11, 2025
An original newspaper account of the gunfight at the OK Corral from 1881 sold for $5,000, and an 1876-CC (Carson City) U.S. Liberty Head $20 gold piece for $4,518 in three days of auctions titled Pioneers & Patriots held March 1 to 3 by Holabird Western Americana Collections LLC. The first two days were held online and live in the Reno, Nev., gallery. Day three was a timed-only session, with no live gallery bidding. Around 1,700 lots came up for bid across the three days, in categories that include Americana, militaria, mining, numismatics, Wild West, philatelic and more. Online bidding was provided by iCollector.com, LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com. Telephone and absentee bids were also accepted. All prices quoted include the buyers premium. We chose the name Pioneers & Patriots to honor notable Western figures such as lawmen, outlaws, generals and presidents, as well as military figures from conflicts such as the Civil War, World Wars I and II, the Mexican Revolution and the French Revolution, said Fred Holabird, president and owner of Holabird Western Americana Collections. The sale was a huge success. The account of the gunfight at the OK Corral in the town of Tombstone in the Arizona Territory was chronicled in the copy of the Tombstone Daily Nugget dated Nov. 24, 1881. The gunfight pitted lawmen (including Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday) against members of a group of cattle rustlers and horse thieves. It lasted less than a minute but is still a major part of Wild West lore. The 1876-CC U.S. Liberty Head $20 gold piece was rare, one of just 138,441 minted in Carson City. It was in Fine-Very Fine condition, a ding above Libertys ear its only noticeable blemish. Other top-selling lots from the numismatics category included a 1934 $1,000 Federal Reserve Note (Fr 2211-L), produced in San Francisco and having the signatures of Julian and Morgenthau. The bill, one of 90,600 printed, showed a vignette of former U.S. President Grover Cleveland and was in VF-EF condition ($2,750). A three-album collection of Morgan silver dollars, 56 coins in all, contained in blue Whitman albums, in dates ranging from 1878-86, mostly in VG-EF condition. There were lower-grade San Francisco coins in the group, but none from Carson City ($2,125). An 1891-CC Morgan silver dollar in About Uncirculated condition, one of 1,618,000 struck and boasting nice luster, with no bag marks, sold for $1,000. The first session contained over 500 lots dedicated to general Americana; minerals (including gold and turquoise) and mining; and stock certificates. Top lots included 21.4 grams of placer gold nuggets weighing a total of 0.686 troy oz., from a volcano claim in an ancient stream bed above Goler Wash in the El Paso mountains near Death Valley, Calif. ($2,125); and a group of nuggets of turquoise, a mix of cut and hand-cut, hand selected for color, weighing 5.4 pounds ($1,125). Antique stock and bond certificates proved to be popular with bidders. A few examples were a United States Centennial International Exhibition (Philadelphia, Pa.) stock certificate, issued to The Dairymen Association for 50 shares at $10 per, dated October 30, 1876, and signed by treasurer Fred Fraley and president John Welsh, in nice condition ($2,125). A rare Combination Gold & Silver Mining Company (Inyo County, Calif.) stock certificate printed in red with yellow background, issued to B.F. Whiten for 40 shares on Jun 26, 1862, signed by James T. Jones as president, CS Higgins secretary, sold for $1,062. A hard-to-find complete set of 12 different postcards by Alberto Martini, each one of them signed by the artist famous for illustrating famous literary works, including producing 132 ink illustrations described as macabre for the stories of Edgar Allan Poe, commanded $1,500. To learn more, visit www.holabirdamericana.com.
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