|
Email Dave
Q. David Bowers, Co-Chairman, is perhaps the best-known and most
noteworthy numismatist of the last 50 years. Beginning in 1953, Dave’s
contributions to numismatics have continued uninterrupted and unabated to the
present day. His work with rare coins is so voluminous and so extraordinary
that he was named by COINAge magazine as one of the “Numismatists of the
Century.” Dave’s dedication to the hobby and his lifelong interest in rare
coins, along with his pursuit of scholarly knowledge, have made him one of the
most honored and revered numismatists of all time. Dave is the only person to
have served as president of both the Professional Numismatists Guild
(1977-1979) and the American Numismatic Association (1983-1985). From the PNG,
he received their highest honor, the Founders Award, and from the ANA, Dave has
received its two most distinguished awards – Numismatist of the Year and the
Farran Zerbe Memorial Award. He has lectured at Harvard University and appeared
on the Today Show as well as on programs on CNN, CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox, the
Discovery Channel and the History Channel. Dave is the most prolific numismatic
author of our generation, having produced 50 works, mostly written in the field
of rare coins, including the ANA Centennial History, History of United
States Coinage (for the Johns Hopkins University), Adventures with Rare
Coins, the two-volume Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the United
States, and A California Gold Rush History. More recently, he also
serves as Numismatic Director of Whitman Publishing LLC, where he has produced
another group of books including the very popular Red Book series. More
of Dave’s books have won “Book of the Year” honors from the Numismatic Literary
Guild than have those of any other author. From the Professional Numismatists
Guild, he has received the coveted Friedberg Award a record seven times! During
his illustrious career, he has catalogued and sold at public auction many of
the finest and most valuable and important collections ever assembled. They
include the Louis E. Eliasberg, Sr. Collection, the only complete United States
coin collection ever brought together, the Harry W. Bass Jr. Collection, the
Ambassador and Mrs. R. Henry Norweb Collection, the John Work Garrett
Collection sold by order of The Johns Hopkins University, the Childs
Collection, the highlight of which was the finest known 1804 silver dollar, the
second most valuable coin ever auctioned, as well as others.
|
|
Email Harvey
Harvey G. Stack, Co-Chairman, has over 50 years of numismatic and
public auction expertise. An American Numismatic Association member for over a
half century, Harvey Stack was a contributor to the building of its Colorado
Springs headquarters, which houses the Stack’s Gallery endowed by his family
and which bears its name. He was directly involved with the first ANA Grading
Guide and has received the Association’s Medal of Merit. In 1967 he represented
the numismatic industry before the U.S. Treasury Department and was
instrumental in bringing repeal of the onerous and long-standing gold coin
import regulations that had unfairly impacted coin collectors throughout the
country. In 1973 he was the sole industry representative to appear before
Congress advocating passage of the Hobby Protection Act. Harvey was appointed
by President Jimmy Carter to the U.S. Assay Commission in 1976, the last
sitting of this oldest citizens’ commission, which had assured the integrity of
the nation’s coinage for nearly two centuries. He and his son, Lawrence R.
Stack, have donated significant numismatic materials to the ANS, the ANA and
the National Numismatic Collection of the Smithsonian Institution where he
serves as a lifetime member of the prestigious Smithson Society. He served as
President of the Professional Numismatists Guild in 1990-91. During this tenure
as President, Harvey effectively defended the PNG and the industry from
proposed Federal Trade Commission regulations which he felt were inappropriate
for responsible professional numismatists. He was honored by his peers with the
coveted PNG Founders Award in 1993 and again in 1998 for an unprecedented
second time. He is a Fellow of the ANS and an active member of the
International Association of Professional Numismatists and Royal Numismatic
Society. He has served as an expert witness for the U.S. Treasury Department,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Secret Service, a number of world
banks, the New York City Police Department, London’s Scotland Yard and other
law enforcement agencies all over the world. Harvey appeared before Congress
during the 1990’s to propose his idea for the “50 State Quarters” commemorative
program; the product of which we are enjoying today. In the summer of 1997 he
received a singular honor from the ANA when he was named the Numismatist of the
Year for 1997 in recognition of 50 years of service to the coin collecting
hobby.
|
|
|
|
Email Larry
Lawrence R. Stack is our Chief Executive Officer/Director of
Numismatics and has been a key figure in the Stack’s family firm for over
three decades. He graduated from the University of Akron (Akron, Ohio) with a
major in history and a minor in philosophy. An experienced collector of the
highest degree, he has formed major important and extensive collections of
French Ecus, Five-Franc pieces and Ecus d’Or. His in-depth collection of Celtic
and Anglo-Saxon coins ranks high among the finest ever assembled and he has
pursued a lifelong interest in English Hammered coinage as well. In the area of
U.S. numismatics, Larry is a serious student of U.S. colonial coins, gold and
type coinage. He is a member of PNG, IAPN, ANA, ANS, Royal Numismatic Society,
British Numismatic Society and many major U.S. state and regional
organizations. He is a member of the Colonial Newsletter Foundation and a
qualified appraiser. During his 30 years in the auction business, Larry has
been instrumental in the sale of many of the most notable collections of our
generation. These include the collections of James A. Stack, the Garrett family
for The Johns Hopkins University, Ellis Robison, Harold Bareford, John L.
Roper, Richard Picker, Floyd T. Starr, Congressman Jimmy Hayes, Herman Halpern,
Amon G. Carter, Jr., John Whitney Walter, Michael F. Price, and David Queller.
Additional highlights of Larry’s career include the sale of the Reed Hawn
properties (including the sale of Hawn’s 1913 Liberty nickel and 1804 dollar);
the ongoing sales of the John J. Ford, Jr. properties; and, with Sotheby’s, the
auctioning of the world’s most valuable coin, the 1933 $20, which realized
$7,590,020. Whitman Publishing has called upon his coin pricing expertise as
its Valuations Editor to provide up-to-date values for its many publications.
|
|
Email Chris
Christine Karstedt serves as our President and oversees auction
operations and customer service. Additionally she handles our marketing and
publicity with unbridled enthusiasm. A fixture at numismatic conventions and
auctions for two decades, Chris has built a vast network of industry contacts
during her extensive career. Chris’ ability to attract worldwide attention to
the sale of numismatic material placed her at the center of the marketing of
the $100 million treasure of the S.S. Central America and the S.S. Brother
Jonathan. Chris has worked with numismatic trade publications as well as
the mainstream press in bringing to market the early sales of the Eliasberg
Collection, the Bass Collection, the Norweb Collection of Canadian coins, the
Norweb Collection of Washingtonia, and countless other sales over her
incomparable career. During her most recent tenure, she has been responsible
for the marketing and publicity of the Dr. Haig A. Koshkarian Collection, a
fabulous array of valuable copper and silver coins; the Oliver Jung Collection,
one of the finest type collections ever assembled; Richard Jewell’s collections
of commemorative and three-dollar gold coins; the Cardinal Collection, the
finest Bust dollars ever assembled and the Louis E. Eliasberg, Sr. Collection
of World Gold Coins and Medals whose prices realized stunned the foreign world.
Her unstinting and tireless efforts help consignors receive the highest
possible prices for their coins. Chris is involved with our day-to-day
operations and is one of our auctioneers.
|
|
|
|
Email David
David T. Alexander received his BS and MA degrees from the University of
Miami and joined the firm as a cataloguer in 1990. A Life Member of the ANA, he
has contributed articles to The Numismatist and the ANA Centennial Anthology
and received the Glenn B. Smedley Award and ANA Medal of Merit. He served on
the staff at Coin World from 1974-81. He received the Clemy Award from
the NLG in 1987. David is a 25-year member of the ANS and a member of the
Augustus B. Sage Society. He has presented papers at the 1999 and 2005 ANS
Conferences on Coinage of the Americas. David is a Contributing Editor of COINage
magazine and pens “The Research Desk” column for Coin World. He received
the 1990 Society for International Numismatics Silver Medal of Merit for
Excellence in Writing and Research and Krause Publications’ Numismatic
Ambassador Award in 1995. In 1998 he founded the Medal Collectors of America
and was elected to the Rittenhouse Society. He was President of the New York
Numismatic Club in 2005-2006.
|
|
Email Jan
Jan Eric Blamberg, Ph.D. is an expert and cataloguer of ancient Greek,
Roman and Byzantine coins as well as Medieval coins. He joined the firm in 1974
after graduate studies which included a year in London as a Fulbright Fellow.
There he completed his doctoral research at the Institute of Classical Studies,
University of London, with extensive use of the numismatic collections of the
British Museum, the Hunter Coin Cabinet (University of Glasgow), the Ashmolean
Museum (Oxford), and the University of Helsinki. He received his doctorate in
Ancient and Medieval History from Indiana University. He has written numerous
articles for The Numismatic Review and has conducted seminars in ancient
coinage for students at Yale and New York University. His in-depth cataloguing
and extensive notes have appeared in major sales, most notably the Collections
of Knobloch, J. Pierpont Morgan, “Men of Rome” and Michael Price. He served as
editor of The Numismatic Legacy of the Jews, published by Stack’s in
2000. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, the New York Numismatic
Club, the ANA since 1976, the ANS since 1980 and the Augustus B. Sage Society.
|
|
|
|
Email Arthur
Arthur Blumenthal’s tenure with the firm is rapidly approaching ten
years after more than two decades as a professional numismatist in various
other capacities. Specializing in U.S. coinage, Arthur has a vast general
knowledge of virtually every aspect of numismatics. He began his career at
Capitol Coin Co. before becoming General Merchandise Manager at Minkus Stamp
and Publishing where his responsibilities included supervising all of the
buying and selling of coins, as well as establishing a nationwide marketing
program for numismatics. Later, he was head trader at the Galerie Des Monnaies
where he spent more than a decade before starting his own coin business. Arthur
is a member of the ANA and ANS as well as several other numismatic
organizations. He has been quoted in the New York Times and The Wall
Street Journal on a variety of numismatic topics. In addition, he is a
Graduate of C.W. Post College where he has a degree in History Education. His
collecting interests are rather eclectic ranging from numismatics to watches.
|
|
John P. Burnham is an expert in U.S., ancient and world coins and medals
and has been a member of the staff since 1974. Educated at the University of
Oregon and Yale, he served nearly 30 years as Curator of the Numismatic
Collection of Yale University. He is an avid collector of medals, especially
railroad medals, and led one of the pioneering, medals-only auction houses,
Collectors Auctions Ltd. He has been a member of the ANA since 1964 and is a
Fellow of the ANS, the Russian Numismatic Society and Medal Collectors of
America. He is also a founding member of the Augustus B. Sage Society of the
ANS. He has written widely on many numismatic subjects. Burnham is former
Chairman of the Connecticut Central Railroad and the Valley Railroad Company,
and has served on the Board of Directors of the Providence and Worcester
Railroad Company and Mutual Shares Corporation. He is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa, Delta Chi, the Elizabethan Club and the Mory’s Association.
|
|
|
|
Email Greg
Greg Cohen began collecting coins at the age of 7 with a handful of
coins given to him by his grandfather. Over the years his casual collecting of
assorted numismatic items became focused on early U.S. half dollars, and he
began collecting by Overton variety. While attending Quinnipiac University,
where he graduated in 2006 with a B.A. in History with minors in political
science and economics, Greg worked for several dealers on a freelance basis.
After graduation, Greg took a position at R.M. Smythe, where he assisted
clients in the office and at shows and cataloguing U.S. and world coins for
auction and retail sale. Here at Stack’s, he works with the entire auction
team, from when the coins first arrive to the end of catalogue production. Greg
is a member of the ANA, JRCS, FUN, and Phi Alpha Theta.
|
|
Email Greg
Gregory J. Cole is a recognized expert on and cataloger of Ancient,
Islamic, Medieval and World Coins and World Exonumia. A leading authority on
Islamic and Asian coinages, antiquities and art, he has been a professional
numismatist for the past 17 years, a numismatic consultant, cataloger and
researcher for 12, and a collector since age 7. Blazing a broad swath through
the world of coins, as a numismatic scholar, Greg has contributed to a number
of references and publications and has participated in the writing of several
score rare coin auction catalogs. In the course of this time, he has personally
cataloged rare coins with a collective value of well over $100 million,
including most recently the Sklarov Collection of Russian Historical Medals,
and, in 2004, the fabled Russian rarity, the Constantine Ruble, which brought
one of the highest prices paid for a world coin in auction. Greg earned both
his Bachelor's and Master's Degrees from New York University. Formerly a
journalist and magazine editor, his assignments to the far flung reaches of the
globe rekindled his pursuit of coin collecting, while expeditions into the
souks and pasars of the Middle East and Southeast Asia honed his interest in
Eastern coinages.
|
|
|
|
Email Tom
Tom Culhane, a graduate of St. Peter's College, Jersey City, NJ, has been a coin dealer since 1979. After starting his career with several major coin companies he began his own coin business, The Elusive Spondulix, in 1986, while maintaining a close working relationship with Stack's for more than 25 years. Known in the coin business for his ability to accurately grade U.S. coins, Tom was a part time grader at NGC, followed by several years as a PCGS grading consultant. Early in 2005 Tom became a Stack's consultant focusing on grading U.S. coins for auction. In addition, Culhane is knowledgeable in such diverse areas as Irish coins and tokens, U.S. Philippines coins, so-called dollars and Civil War tokens. This broad-based knowledge is one reason the television program Jeopardy! has consulted with Tom to verify numismatic questions. After contributing to the Redbook and Bluebook for more than 10 years Culhane focused on the Blackbook of U.S. Coins and since 1998 has written the introductory articles yearly and assisted with price changes. On a personal note Tom has spent much of his free time proposing and encouraging the U.S. Postal Service to issue commemorative stamps honoring Irish Immigration, James Cagney and, currently, Saint Patrick's Day. Culhane had also spent 12 years competing in professional arm wrestling tournaments.
|
|
Email Stephen
Stephen Goldsmith earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology from Brooklyn
College, and recently joined the firm as Director of Numismatics. He is a Past
President and a former Board Member of the Professional Currency Dealers
Association, and a member of ANA, SPMC, IBSS, New England Appraisers
Association, among others. As Auction Director at R.M. Smythe & Co., he helped
publish over two hundred auction catalogues including some of the largest
Confederate paper money and bond collections ever sold. Under his direction,
Smythe obtained the world’s largest obsolete banknote consignment, The Herb
and Martha Schingoethe Collection, containing over 30,000 different
notes. Mr. Goldsmith edited Collecting Confederate Paper Money (Pierre
Fricke 2005), the winner of the Numismatic Literary Guild’s 2005 Paper Money
Book of the Year Award. He has contributed to Paper Money of the United
States by Arthur and Ira Friedberg, A Guidebook of Southern States
Currency by Hugh Shull, and A Comprehensive Catalogue & History of
Confederate Bonds by Douglas B. Ball.
|
|
|
|
Email Bruce
Bruce Roland Hagen has been a collector since 1971 and a professional
numismatist since 1988. His areas of expertise include U.S. coins and paper
money, world coins from 1400 to 1900, American and world medals, Polar
exploration ephemera, world paper money and American historical documents.
Bruce has worked as a private consultant to numismatic auction houses, museums
and foundations, and private collectors of American historical paper currency
and financial documents. He has contributed to well over 200 numismatic auction
catalogues featuring over $50 million of historical paper currency, coins and
medals, stocks and bonds, financial documents and other numismatic items. He is
a member of over a dozen organizations including the PCDA, ANA, ANS, SPMC,
IBNS, CSNS, FUN, and several regional clubs. Most recently, Bruce has been the
lead paper money cataloguer for the John J. Ford, Jr. Collection. He has also
worked on the Herb and Martha Schingoethe obsolete currency sales by R.M.
Smythe & Co. where he had previously served as VP. He has also contributed
to numerous books and articles including Friedberg’s Paper Money of the United
States and the Standard Guide to Small-Size U.S. Paper Money by
Oakes and Schwartz.
|
|
Email Michael
Michael J. Hodder is a Numismatic Consultant who is currently
responsible for cataloguing the auction sales of the John J. Ford, Jr.
Collection, the magnificence of which has never before been seen in numismatics
in one collection. Mike’s herculean efforts have vaulted the prices realized to
an astonishing $50 million and that figure is still growing. He specializes in
early American coins, medals and militaria struck prior to 1837 and is one of
the foremost numismatic researchers of our time. He is a Fellow of the American
Numismatic Society and a Founder of the Colonial Coin Collectors Club. Mike has
written several books and countless articles on colonial and federal issue
coins and medals including his award winning The Norweb Collection: An
American Legacy written with Q. David Bowers and the classic Standard
Catalogue of Encased Postage Stamps. Over the last 25 years, he has been
responsible for cataloguing some of the most significant collections to be sold
at public auction including the landmark John Whitney Walter Collection of
Coins of 1796, the Queller Family Collection of Half Dollars, the Hain Family
Collection of 1652 Massachusetts Silver and the Ambassador and Mrs. R. Henry
Norweb Collection of U.S. Coins. The catalogues Mike has written have won more
prestigious Numismatic Literary Guild Catalogue of the Year and Extraordinary
Merit Awards than any other cataloguer in history. Fellow, Royal Asiatic
Society.
|
|
|
|
Email Jack
Jack McNamara has been interested in numismatics since boyhood. He was
introduced to coin collecting by his maternal grandfather (whose own
grandfather had advertised coins for sale in the American Journal of
Numismatics in the late 19th century!) by playing bingo with Wheat cents
and a Whitman coin folder. Jack has a general knowledge of U.S. coins and paper
money, with early American copper coins being his specialty. He is a
contributor to several numismatic publications and auction catalogues including
the Handbook of United States Coins and the 15th sale of the John J.
Ford, Jr. Collection. A graduate of Rutgers University, he is a lifelong New
Jersey resident and as such has a great interest in the coinage and currency of
his home state. “Jack Mac” can regularly be found at the New York office
cataloguing coins, working with consignors and assisting our retail clientele.
|
|
Email Bill
Bill Metropolis, a leading authority in the field of mineralogy, is a
lifetime collector of coins, specializing in Indian cents. Bill received his
undergraduate degree at Salem State College and did his graduate studies at the
University of Maryland. For 26 years he was curator of the Mineralogical Museum
at Harvard University. He continues to curate the mineral collection at
Lafayette College and has served on the boards of the State of California
Mineral Collection Preservation Committee and the Society of Mineralogical
Museum Professionals. He is an accomplished author in both numismatics and
mineralogy and was a consulting editor for a leading mineralogical magazine. He
has been a consultant and appraiser for several museums, including the
Smithsonian Institution, the Houston Museum of Nature, the Boston Museum of
Science, and the Arizona Sonoran Desert Museum. Bill has lectured at numerous
universities around the world.
|
|
|
|
Email Scott
Scott Mitchell has been with the firm since 1981. He earned his Bachelor
of Science Degree from Wheaton College (Illinois) in mathematics and economics
with advanced graduate study at the Indiana University School of Business.
Scott was formerly a staff member of Galerie des Monnaies, Minkus Stamp and
Publishing and Capitol Coin Co. He updated and extensively revised the American
Guide to U.S. Coins during a four year period as its editor and also is a
contributor to A Guide Book of United States Coins, as well as a number
of other coin and currency references. An avid numismatist since the age of
seven, his collecting interests include Confederate, Fractional and Pre-Federal
currency to U.S. patterns, Roman Imperial denarii, foreign crowns and even
sales tax tokens. On a professional level, he is well-versed in every area of
U.S. coins and currency and has acquired particular expertise in U.S. type
coins, gold, currency and die variety attributions. As one of our senior
numismatists, Scott has catalogued many specialized collections, including the
Wm. Thomas Michaels Collection of Indian Head Eagles, the Randolph S.
Rothschild Collection of U.S. Patterns, and the Lemus Collection of Seated
Liberty Dimes.
|
|
Email John
John M. Pack, one of our auction consignment specialists, has been
involved in numismatics for over 20 years. His enthusiasm for all aspects of
numismatics, and his sincere approach, guarantees that every consignment will
be presented to its finest advantage so as to provide the highest possible
prices realized. Further, John will make sure that each and every consignor
will have a pleasurable transaction with our firm. In addition to working with
auction consignors, John catalogues currency for the firm. His cataloguing
talents were widely recognized for several record setting presentations of U.S.
paper money highlighted by the world-renowned collections of Harry W. Bass, Jr.
and Wayne S. Rich. In addition, he was selected to compose the currency chapter
of the important Harry W. Bass, Jr. Museum Sylloge. Most recently, he
has become intimately involved with the vast American Banknote Co. materials
and has superbly catalogued a good portion of our recent offerings.
|
|
|
|
Email Tom
Tom Panichella became a coin collector at the age of eight, searching
for coins in his family’s grocery store register. He focused on 20th-century
U.S. coins, making an extensive study of Buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes and
Standing Liberty quarters. Tom joined the firm in December 1985 after nine
years with Minkus Stamp & Coin, the last two years of which he served as
head coin and currency buyer. In addition to working at the New York City
office, Tom travels to most of the significant coin and currency conventions
held around the U.S. He also travels extensively to appraise and purchase
collections for the company. An ANA member since 1988, he has a lifelong
interest in the world of stamps and is a former member of the American
Philatelic Society. Tom is also a member of Central States, The Professional
Currency Dealers Association, and the Fractional Currency Collectors Board. His
current interests include collecting New Jersey Obsolete Currency.
|
|
Email Beth
Beth Piper began her career in numismatics at Bowers and Merena and
worked 18 years with that firm. In that time, she earned the distinction of
having spent more continuous years working under the direction of Q. David
Bowers than any other individual. Beth has participated in nearly every
position required at a leading numismatic auction firm, and her
responsibilities encompassed receptionist to coin grading to direct sales, as
well as numismatic research and cataloguing of auction lots. One of her primary
jobs is processing and proofreading auction lots and the final compilation of
data files for catalogues. Her work with great numismatic auction sales is
extensive and includes landmark offerings such as the collections of the Norweb
family, Eliasberg, Bass and Childs, among over 100 other sales.
|
|
|
|
Email Andy
Andrew W. Pollock III has authored United States Patterns and Related
Issues, a standard reference book on United States pattern coins issued
from 1792 to circa 1979, which won the prestigious PNG’s Friedberg Award in
1995. This book is literally an encyclopedia of information about the
ever-popular pattern series. He is also the author of Advertisement Index to
the Boston Newsletter and Massachusetts Gazette, 1704-1776, nearly 3,700
pages in length. This latter title features approximately 10,000-12,000
alphabetically-listed entries for individuals, businesses, ships incorporating
historical and biographical information gleaned from an estimated 50,000-60,000
advertisements from the historic newspapers. Over the years, Pollock has
participated in the writing of dozens of rare coin auction catalogues, and has
personally catalogued rare coins having an estimated collective value
approaching $100 million. As a hobby, Pollock enjoys collecting antique hand
tools manufactured in Kingston, MA.
|
|
Email Frank
Frank Van Valen is one of America’s best known numismatic personalities
and one of our senior cataloguers, and is now in his 21st year of working with
Q. David Bowers, first at Bowers and Merena, then American Numismatic Rarities,
and now for the Stack's organization. Widely praised for over two decades for
his numismatic expertise, Frank’s byline has appeared in scores of the most
important auction catalogues ever written including the Ambassador and Mrs. R.
Henry Norweb Collection of U.S. Coins, and specialized collections such as the
Texas Collection of California Fractional Gold and the historic coin collection
of Commodore Matthew C. Perry. A coin collector since 1961, Frank has
contributed to the last 19 editions of A Guide Book of United States Coins
and his writing talents have earned him the recognition of the NLG.
Additionally, his writings have appeared in The Numismatist and many
club periodicals over the years. A current ANA Life Member with nearly 30 years
of membership, he has taught courses on U.S. type coins at numerous summer
seminars hosted by the ANA, and is a member of many national and specialty
organizations as well. Frank has an expert understanding of the intricacies of
all American coinage in addition to many other numismatic fields. He is also
one of our very popular and featured auctioneers.
|
|
|
|
Email Vicken
Vicken Yegparian, one of our auction consignment specialists, is a
cataloguer of U.S. coins in copper, silver and gold, including coins of the
Colonial and Confederation periods. He is also very much involved with the
day-to-day operations running the auction business. A graduate of Columbia
University, Vicken was the first recipient of the Georgia Stamm Chamberlain
Memorial Award of the Medal Collectors of America for his presentation on
colonial era medals of his alma mater, “The Silver Medals of the King’s
College Literary Society, 1767-1771,” delivered at the 2004 Coinage of the
Americas Conference held by the ANS. He is a member of many numismatic
organizations, including the ANA, ANS, the Colonial Coin Collectors Club, and
the John Reich Collectors Society, the Liberty Seated Collectors Club and the
Fly-In Club (Flying Eagle and Indian Head Collectors Club) among numerous other
specialty clubs.
|
|
|
|
|