Gold coin from boy's treasure box identified as extreme rarity minted from seized-circa 1702 Spanish booty

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Gold coin from boy's treasure box identified as extreme rarity minted from seized-circa 1702 Spanish booty
The consignor presented a handful of mixed coins to Boningtons’ coin specialist, Gregory Tong, having no idea that the gold coin shown at lower right was a genuine treasure. Image courtesy of Boningtons.



EPPING.- Bonington’s auction house near London will auction one of Britain’s rarest coins on Wednesday, November 16. The company is offering to bidders worldwide a coveted Queen Anne “Vigo” 5-guinea gold coin valued at $240,000-$300,000.

The coin is one of only 20 that were made from the 7.5lbs of gold the British seized from Spanish treasure ships in Vigo Bay, northern Spain, on Oct. 23, 1702 – exactly 314 years ago. It is one of only 15 known to have survived and is only the sixth example of its type to be offered for sale in the last 50 years.

Remarkably, the coin had been kept in a little boy’s treasure box after having passed down through four generations of the same family. No one in the family had the slightest inkling of its true value.

“The coin was consigned to us by a gentleman from Hertfordshire whose grandfather had given it to him many years ago when he was a young boy. However, he had no idea what it was worth until recently, when he showed it to our coin specialist, Gregory Tong,” said Boningtons spokesman Luke Bodalbhai. “Gregory immediately recognized the coin and informed the consignor of its value.”

Stunned and delighted by the news, the consignor related the coin’s history. “My granddad travelled all over the world during his working life and collected many coins from the various countries where he had been,” the consignor said. “As a boy, I was into pirate treasure, so he gave me bags of coins to play with. As time passed, these coins went back into bags and boxes and were forgotten about. Then, after my granddad passed away, I rediscovered the coins and recalled how much I had enjoyed them as a boy. So I gave them to my own son to play with, including the Queen Anne Vigo 5-guinea. He kept it in his treasure box and has been playing ‘pirate’ with it just as I did, all those years ago.”

The “Vigo” coins were made from treasure that the British fleet seized in 1702 from Franco-Spanish ships returning from America, following the Brits’ unsuccessful attempt to capture Cadiz. Struck in 1703, the coins were intended to divert attention from the failed campaign at Cadiz, highlighting instead the haul of treasure they had captured on their way home. The treasure was delivered with full pageantry through London and received at the Royal Mint by the Master of the Mint, Sir Isaac Newton.

The coin is expected to break Boningtons’ house record set earlier this year with the sale of a painting by Sir Winston Churchill.










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