Rare Hawaiian $500 Currency of 1879 Offered in Heritage’s April Central States Auction

Hawaiian Islands $500 (1879) Dallas, TX. A piece of rare and never-circulated Hawaiian paper money – a $500 note that was to be issued in 1879 – is being offered at auction in Rosemont, Illinois on April 16-18. The $500 note, which exists only as a set of proof printings of the face and back plates, is so incredibly rare that it remains unpriced in the standard currency reference guides. The pair of proof printings is one of only two known as well. This pair of proofs is included in the catalog for the Official Auction of the Central States Numismatic Society convention, being held in Rosemont, Illinois on April 17-19. The catalog for the auction is now posted by Heritage Auction Galleries on their HA.com/Currency website.

“With only two such sets known to exist,” explained Heritage currency expert Allen Mincho, “it is understandable that they are unpriced in the Krause reference guide. This set made its public debut at the 1990 auction of the archives of the American Bank Note Printing Company. Designed for the Kingdom of Hawaii, they are printed on proof paper which has been mounted on card stock, as was the custom for ABNCo file copies. The face proof has a folded registry stub as produced which extends over the edge of the card stock.”

“The face of the note,” continued Mincho, “also bears vignettes of King Kamehameha, sailing vessels, a locomotive, and sugar cane harvesting. The obligation clause reads ‘five hundred dollars in silver coin payable to the bearer on demand.’ This design only exists as these proof printings. They have been awarded classification as Pick #5 in that reference guide.”

To discuss consigning coins or currency to an upcoming auction, please call the Heritage Consignor Hotlines at 800-872-6467 ext. 1000 (Coins); or ext. 1001 (Currency).

For more information about Heritage’s auctions, and a complete record of prices realized, along with full-color, enlargeable photos of each lot, please visit www.HA.com.

To  reserve your copy of any Heritage auction catalog, please contact Client Services at 1-800-872-6467, ext. 1150, or visit www.HA.com/Catalog to order by email.

Related posts:

  1. Rare 1920 Gold Dollar Struck in Manila to Honor President Wilson to be Offered in Heritage’s April Central States Auction
  2. Rare 1838-O Half Dollar Struck to Commemorate the Opening of the New Orleans Mint Will be Offered in Heritage’s April Central States Auction
  3. Heritage to Auction Thomas M. Flynn Collection of United States and Canadian Currency
  4. $10 Million Queller Family Collection to be Offered at Central States
  5. Heritage and Central States Numismatic Society Ink Official Auctioneer Contract Through 2011
  6. Heritage to offer 1876-CC Twenty Cent Piece at Central States
  7. Gamble Collection Highlights Heritage Currency Auction at FUN
  8. Gold Ingots from the S.S. Central America Pace Heritage Auction Results in Long Beach
  9. The Super-Rare 1825 O-118 Bust Half to be offered by Heritage
  10. Stellar 1879-S $20 to be offered

About the Author

Heritage Auction Galleries is the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Our 329,383 members are a testament to our reputation for professional business practices and unprecedented knowledge in the field of collectibles. Our mission is to provide the Internet's most indispensable trading platform and source of information for serious collectors, investors and dealers.

RSS Feed for This Post2 Comment(s)

  1. Joe Vierra | Apr 30, 2009 | Reply

    i was wondering about the hawaiian monies. i have couple of them but they’re really faded. i can clearly see the number amounts on them, 2 one hundred dollar bills, a fifty dollar bill, a ten and i think a five. I wanted to know what it’s worth. I’m just curious if anyone has an answer, anything would be helpful thanks

  2. Lon Williams | Jan 22, 2010 | Reply

    Assuming you’re referring to a U.S. $1 bill with the word HAWAII overstamped on it, its collector value is anywhere from $10 to $40 depending on how worn it is.

    These bills were specially printed for use during WWII so they could be declared worthless if captured by the Japanese.

RSS Feed for This PostPost a Comment

DISCLAIMER: All content within CoinLink is presented for informational purposes only, with no guarantee of accuracy.
CoinLink does not buy or sell coins or numismatic material, and has no ownership interest in any web site listed within CoinLink.
All News and Article links are direct, without framing, to the original source, which is solely responsible for the content.
No endorsement or affiliation to or from CoinLink is made.