The Numismatic Bibliomania Society

PREV ARTICLE       NEXT ARTICLE       FULL ISSUE       PREV FULL ISSUE      

V27 2024 INDEX       E-SYLUM ARCHIVE

The E-Sylum: Volume 27, Number 4, January 28, 2024, Article 17

WILLIAM SUMNER APPLETON (1840-1903)

E-Sylum Feature Writer and American Numismatic Biographies author Pete Smith submitted this article on Boston numismatist William Sumner Appleton. Thank you. -Editor

  William Sumner Appleton (1840-1903)

Last week I read a book; this week I read a periodical. The item was Memoir of William Sumner Appleton, A.M. by Charles C. Smith in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Volume XXXVII, Oct. 1903, pages 516-527. Here are some excerpts:

WILLIAM SUMNER APPLETON was born in Boston January 11, 1840, and died in his native city April 28, 1903. He was the elder son of the Hon. Nathan Appleton, for nearly thirty years a member of this Society, and for three sessions a Representative in Congress from the Boston district, by his second wife, Harriet Coffin, daughter of Jeffrey Sumner, of Boston.

As a small boy he was sent to a boarding school at Jamaica Plain, then kept by Mr. Cornelious M. Vinson, which had enjoyed a wide reputation under the management of Mr. Charles W. Greene, its first principal. He was fitted for college in the private Latin School of Mr. Epes S. Dixwell, who had recently resigned the headmastership of the Boston Latin School, and who was the most eminent classical teacher in this community. The thoroughness of his preparation was seen in his high rank in the first three years of his college course. He graduated in 1860 in the first half of his class, being entitled to a part at Commencement, a disquisition on A Uniform Coinage.

In the year in which he graduated he was one of the founders of the Boston Numismatic Society, and he was its secretary from that time until his death.

In his early years he was fond of dancing and social life. From 1864 to 1871 he was a member of the Independent Corps of Cadets, and for the last four years was in command of a company, with the rank of first lieutenant.

His interest in coins and medals dates back to his boyhood, and is mentioned in some of his earliest letters. This study never lost its attractiveness to him, and was pursued to the end of his life. At his death his collection, which was remarkable both for the beauty and the rarity of its specimens, included about twelve thousand coins and three thousand medals, the greater part of which he himself catalogued with great minuteness. Besides being one of the original members of the Numismatic Society, he was one of the Publishing Committee of the American Journal of Numismatics from 1870 to 1891, and made many short communications to it.

Inheriting from his father, who died in 1861, and his mother, who died in 1867, an ample fortune, he had no need to pursue any gainful profession; but he nevertheless entered the Cambridge Law School, and graduated in July, 1865, with the degree of L.L. B.

In 1867, at the early age of twenty-seven, he was honored with an appointment as one of the commissioners to attend the annual assay at the United States Mint.4

August 12, 1871, he was married, at the United States Legation in Berne, Switzerland, to Edith Stuart, daughter of his cousin William Stuart Appleton, of Baltimore, Maryland. His eldest child, a daughter, was born in Paris before his return to Boston.

An ineffective delivery and an indistinctness of speech, especially in his later years, detracted much from the interest with which his papers and remarks were listened to; but their value was at once seen when written out in his clear and beautiful handwriting or transferred to the printed page.

by his last will, dated April 25, 1902, Mr. Appleton gave … a very valuable and important part of his collection of medals and coins to the Historical Society; and … he directed the trustees under his will to pay over specified sums to numerous literary, scientific, and charitable societies or institutions, the first of which was this Society, and among the others were the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the New England Historic-Genealogical Society.

William Sumner Appleton.01 The published memoir includes an extensive description of six trips to Europe and of his many publications on genealogy. I have always liked Appleton because of the charming portrait published with the memoir. It was also published in the American Journal of Numismatics at about the same time.

The first sale from his collection was conducted by Charles Steigerwalt on May 21, 1907. This was composed of Canadian and British coins and medals. The second sale was conducted by Steigerwalt on January 18, 1910. This included ancient Greek, Roman and Egyptian coins. Lot 232 was a collection of 259 coins from Alexandria. Lot 259 was a collection of 247 Roman Family Denarii.

Thomas Elder sold coins and medals from Appleton in his 81st sale on July 8 & 9, 1913. The sale began with a long run of world medals including strong groups of the medals of Luther and of Napoleon. It is unfortunate that Appleton did not leave a journal of his travels and records of his purchases. The collection shows what could be acquired by someone with free time, unlimited funds and a love of the cultural articles of history.

When Thomas Elder promoted his auction of the Appleton library, he stated This collection of Books is the largest ever offered in the United States. The sale was conducted May 10, 1913, with 414 lots. Many lots of periodicals were sold in group lots.

The Massachusetts Historical Society did not have adequate resources to provide security for the coins and to make them available for research. Some had gone missing by 1920. Eventually they put the coins in a bank vault where they were not available to anyone. The coins were consigned to Stack's for a series of six auctions conducted over 1970 to 1976.

Samuel Appleton appears on a medal struck at the U. S. Mint for the Massachusetts Historical Society. (Julian AM-43) Samuel Appleton was the uncle of William Sumner Appleton.

E-Sylum Leidman ad02new portrait



Wayne Homren, Editor

Google
 
NBS (coinbooks.org) Web

The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.

To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@gmail.com

To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum

PREV ARTICLE       NEXT ARTICLE       FULL ISSUE       PREV FULL ISSUE      

V27 2024 INDEX       E-SYLUM ARCHIVE

Copyright © 1998 - 2023 The Numismatic Bibliomania Society (NBS)
All Rights Reserved.

NBS Home Page
Contact the NBS webmaster
coin