Should I be amusingly heartened or gut-achingly sick over the fact that even as we try to claw our way out of the worst economic train wreck since the Great Depression there are still people gathering together to slug it out to pay $3 million for a nickel?
The nickel in question is the 1913 Liberty Head nickel, which will go on auction in Orlando Florida January 6.

Says Greg Rohan, president of the auction firm handling the sale:
"It's always exciting for collectors when a 1913 Liberty nickel comes on the market, and this one should bring $3 million or higher."
From a press release today:
"The 1913-dated Liberty nickels are among the greatest mysteries of American coinage," said Rohan. "James Earle Fraser's famous 'Buffalo nickel' design should have appeared on every coin dated 1913. Yet there are five 1913 nickels that have the old Liberty design instead."
Of the five Liberty nickels, two are in museum collections, leaving just three available to collectors. In the past decade auction appearances of 1913 Liberty nickels have been rarer than the coins themselves. Like the other 1913 Liberty nickels, the example offered by Heritage has become individually famous. It is known as the "Olsen specimen" after an early owner, but his is hardly the only notable name in its provenance.
Colonel E.H.R. Green, son of Hetty Green ("The Witch of Wall Street"), owned all five 1913 Liberty nickels, as did the numismatist-scholar Eric P. Newman. King Farouk of Egypt held the Olsen specimen for several years in the 1940s, and from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s, it belonged to Dr. Jerry Buss, owner of the Los Angeles Lakers.
A coin such as the Olsen specimen is often in the limelight, and this was never truer than in 1972 and 1973, when it sold for a record-setting price and became part of TV history.
"In 1972, World Wide Coin Investments paid $100,000 for this 1913 Liberty nickel, the first time a collectible U.S. coin was bought for a six-figure sum," said Rohan. "The newsmaking nickel went on-location to film scenes for an episode of the famous police drama Hawaii Five-O."
Millions of viewers were watching on Dec. 11, 1973, as a thief and the police sought the precious coin. In the space of an hour, the Olsen specimen became the single most famous coin in the world.
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