Irregular Postings on Coin Collecting & Numismatics - Both Canonical & Conanical

A Scion Society of The Baker Street Irregulars

Numismatists Do Not Fear Change

Mysterious money in money-themed literature abounds for collectors

Mysterious money in money-themed literature abounds for collectors

Orosz-051815Is it possible for you to own a numismatic library without owning a numismatic reference?

Yes, and it’s no mystery how; literature abounds with plots featuring coins, especially in detective stories. So many money-themed Sherlock Holmes tales fill the canon that Holmes-reading numismatists recently formed a club, The Fourth Garrideb.

       1787-brasher-doubloon

Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe chased a privately minted gold piece in The High Window, better known under its reissued title, The Brasher Doubloon.

My favorite numismatic whodunit is Ellery Queen’s The Mystery of the President’s Half Disme.

Ellery Queen appeared to be his own Dr. Watson, writing prolifically about his exploits from 1929 to 1971. “Ellery Queen,” however, was actually the joint pseudonym of Brooklyn-born cousins Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, except that Dannay was born Daniel Nathan, and Lee was born Manford Lepofsky.

So Nathan/Dannay and Lee/Lepofsky were Ellery Queen, except when they wrote four mysteries under another joint pseudonym, Barnaby Ross.

As Ellery, the cousins were detective royalty. Their novels, short stories, anthologies, radio and TV series, movies, and even their own monthly mystery magazine, made Ellery America’s favorite mid-century sleuth.

With so many bases to cover, the cousins pioneered recycling, routinely meeting deadlines by reusing plots under different titles. According to Francis M. Nevins, in Ellery Queen: The Art of Detection, the third episode of NBC Radio’s series “The Adventures of Ellery Queen” for 1942, broadcast Feb. 19 to 21, was titled “George Washington’s Dollar.”

Queen expanded that radio script into a short story for Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine for February 1947, under the title “The President’s Half Disme.”

The cousins next used the story to fill February’s slot in their anthology Calendar of Crime (1951). It has since been republished in other anthologies, such as in Haycraft’s and Beecroft’s Ten Great Mysteries (1959).

1792_half_disme

The plot features an intellectual battle royal between the king of sleuths and the father of his country. Ellery is summoned to the Clarke farm, a few miles south of Philadelphia, where Washington supposedly buried, in a copper case crafted by Paul Revere, a 1791 half disme, underneath one of a grove of oaks.

(Dannay was enough of a numismatist to know that half dismes weren’t struck in 1791; I won’t reveal the inventive explanation.)

But every oak has been felled, every stump pulled, every hole dug beneath, and there is still no sign of Revere’s handiwork holding the unique half disme.

Ellery wrestles with George Washington’s ghost, even chops down a cherry tree, and deduces where in the grove the president buried the first coin struck by the United States, just as dawn is breaking: on Feb. 22!

Unless you insist on first editions, you can build a library of literature about coins for a mysteriously low sum. You can fill a bookshelf with numismatic mysteries for $100 or less.

Only Ellery Queen could explain why anyone wouldn’t do it!

This post was originally published in the Numismatic Bookie column from the May 18, 2015 issue of Coin World

One Response to Mysterious money in money-themed literature abounds for collectors

  1. You may be interested to know that while the University of Texas at Austin
    Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center is best known among
    Sherlockians for holding manuscripts for “A Scandal in Bohemia,”
    “The Adventure of the Golden Pince-Nez” (written at Undershaw), a page
    from “The Hound of the Baskervilles manuscript”, and an original
    Beaton’s Christmas Annual, it also holds the Ellery Queen Collection.

    The Ellery Queen Collection includes a number of Sherlockian items, as
    Leslie Klinger found to his delight when he was given a private tour of
    the Collection when he was at the HRC in 2005 to promote
    “The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes”. Waterloo Station helped host
    Leslie and I had the privilege of being able to join this private tour of
    of the Ellery Queen Collection. As with everything else at the HRC,
    except those items deemed too fragile (ACD’s golf clubs), every item
    is available to the general public. However, tour of the actual stacks
    is normally not available.

    I am also old enough to remember when the Ellery Queen Collection
    was in the open stacks of the Perry-Castaneda Library and available
    for personal check-out– a situation that causes groans amongst the
    current curators, accompanied by rolls of the eyes.