The Coinspiracy Podcast

The 1933 Double Eagle: A Coin of Crime and Legend

17 min · 25 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio The 1933 Double Eagle: A Coin of Crime and Legend

Descripción

In 1933, amid the Great Depression, the US Mint produced over 445,000 $20 Saint Gaudens Double Eagles, only for them to be ordered destroyed under President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 6102. However, several coins mysteriously survived this destruction, slipping into the hands of collectors through Israel Switt, a Philadelphia jeweler. These coins became illegal to own, sparking intrigue and legal battles over the years. While the government seized many, one coin sold for a record $18.9 million, highlighting a saga of gold, crime, and history. This compelling narrative explores how these coins lived on, stirring curiosity and controversy alike. 🔍 Follow The Coinspiracy Podcast, download the episode, and find us on Whatnot at @agirlwholovescoins to keep the conversation going.

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6 episodios

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INTRO: The Treasure Instinct

Why do we search for things we may never find? From buried treasure and lost civilizations to secret codes, stolen artifacts, and mysteries that refuse to die, we've always been drawn to stories hiding just beyond our reach. But our fascination with the unknown isn't simply about greed, curiosity, or the promise of discovery. It's something deeper. Something instinctive. In this season of Coinspiracy, we explore the psychology behind humanity's enduring attraction to hidden things. Why do unfinished stories linger in our minds? Why do possibilities captivate us more than certainty? And what compels ordinary people to devote extraordinary amounts of time, energy, and hope to questions that may never be fully resolved? Over the course of this season, we'll descend into legendary treasure hunts, unravel enduring codes, follow the trails of lost fortunes, revisit historical mysteries, and examine modern obsessions that continue to capture the public imagination. But beneath each story lies the same question: What do the mysteries we chase reveal about the people chasing them? Because perhaps the greatest mystery isn't what we're searching for. IT'S WHY WE CAN'T STOP LOOKING. SEASON 2: TREASURE STATE OF MIND * Episode 1: The Treasure Instinct * Why do humans search for things we may never find? * Episode 2: The Hole That Ate Generations * Why do unfinished stories survive? * Episode 3: The Code That Refused to Die * Why do puzzles consume us? * Episode 4: Gold Fever * Why do hope and risk override reason? * Episode 5: The Treasure Pirates Never Buried * Why do we romanticize outlaws? * Episode 6: The Treasure of Kings * Why do legends outgrow evidence? * Episode 7: Ghost Gold * Why can't we let history go? * Episode 8: The Modern Treasure Curse * Why can't we stop looking, even now?

17 de jun de 202613 min
episode The 1933 Double Eagle: A Coin of Crime and Legend artwork

The 1933 Double Eagle: A Coin of Crime and Legend

In 1933, amid the Great Depression, the US Mint produced over 445,000 $20 Saint Gaudens Double Eagles, only for them to be ordered destroyed under President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 6102. However, several coins mysteriously survived this destruction, slipping into the hands of collectors through Israel Switt, a Philadelphia jeweler. These coins became illegal to own, sparking intrigue and legal battles over the years. While the government seized many, one coin sold for a record $18.9 million, highlighting a saga of gold, crime, and history. This compelling narrative explores how these coins lived on, stirring curiosity and controversy alike. 🔍 Follow The Coinspiracy Podcast, download the episode, and find us on Whatnot at @agirlwholovescoins to keep the conversation going.

25 de ene de 202617 min
episode The Racketeer Nickel - Fact or Fiction artwork

The Racketeer Nickel - Fact or Fiction

The story most collectors know centers on Josh Tatum, a silent trickster who supposedly gold-plated nickels, passed them as five-dollar gold pieces, and walked free from court without ever saying a word. But that’s not where the documented history leads. In this episode of The Coinspiracy Podcast, we move beyond legend and into the record. From San Francisco’s red-light district to a federal courtroom, the real story follows Charles Ferguson, the U.S. Secret Service, and a conviction that proves the Racketeer Nickel was not just folklore, but a very real crime repeated across the country. So how did a real criminal case fade, while a perfect story took its place? Listen as we untangle myth from fact and take a closer look at one of numismatics’ most enduring legends. 🔍 Follow The Coinspiracy Podcast, download the episode, and find us on Whatnot at @agirlwholovescoins to keep the conversation going.

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