Feature Stories:


Huntington Medal Award to T. V. Buttrey

On Saturday March 16 the Archer M. Huntington Medal Award for 1996 was presented to Theodore V. Buttrey, Emeritus Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan and Emeritus Keeper of Coins at the Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge. The award is given in recognition of outstanding achievement in numismatic scholarship.

Mark Salton, the Chairman of the Huntington Medal Award Committee read the following citation:
"Today, we honor a numismatist whose dedication to the science has spanned more than four decades and continues undiminished. The poet Robert Herrick wrote some 300 years ago 'Attempt the end and never stand to doubt, Nothing's so hard but research will find it out.' If we were looking for scholars in our time for whom those lines might have been intended, among the first to come to mind would be today's medallist.

"Theodore Buttrey's academic achievements are outstanding. Among them, he was first Professor and then Chairman of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan, 1964-68; elected Life Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge University, 1972; Keeper of Coins, Fitzwilliam Museum, 1988-91; Fulbright Professor at Copenhagen University, 1985; Medallist of the Royal Numismatic Society, 1983; and President of the Royal Numismatic Society, 1989-94, no mean achievement for an American.

"His numismatic career began in 1952 with his participation in the ANS Graduate Seminar, and since then he has shown on many occasions how research, if persistent and thorough, can uncover new insights even where problems appear forbiddingly thorny. The bibliography of his activity bears this out. It is too extensive to be recited here in its entirely, but several of his most significant writings should be mentioned: The Triumviral Portrait Gold of the Quattuorviri Monetales of 12 B.C. (ANSNNM 137, 1956) which shows the analytical skill of the writer, shedding a clear light on the hitherto only vaguely understood question of the moneyers' college of that year with conclusions based on meticulous die studies, and each step in the reasoning carefully backed by supporting evidence; 'Chronology of the Flavian Titulature' (1980) followed by 'Flavian Numismatic Titulature,' RNS Presidential Address (1990); work in collaboration with Ian Carradice on a review of RIC 2 concerning Flavian emperors; 'Morgantina Studies, the Coins,' Numismatic Chronicle (1973) and Princeton (1989); 'The Denarii of Pescennius Niger,' RNS Presidential Address (1992) where he identified no less than 50 Niger obverse legends; and, not to go unmentioned, numerous hoard reports, excavation records, and reviews. Forthcoming studies include a corpus of the coinage of Pescennius Niger, a work on the denarii of Publius Crepusius proceeding jointly with Giles Carter and Charles Hersh, and a study on Pharaonic imitations of Athenian tetradrachms.

"It is evident that Roman numismatics in all its aspects is a focal point of his interests. On the other hand, his scientific inquiry has by no means been limited to the classical period. A large body of his work is devoted to Mexican numismatics, as is borne out by numerous essays, papers, and publications, both in English and in Spanish, examining many facets of the coinages of our neighbor to the South. They include: The Guide Book of Mexican Coins, first published in 1969, followed by repeated updated editions, the sixth together with Clyde Hubbard in 1992; 'Central America under the Mexican Empire, 1822-1823,' ANSMN 13 (1967); a number of papers on coinages of the Zapata uprising; and numerous others as well.

"As if all this would not suffice, Theodore Buttrey also is the author of articles on numismatics and archaeology intended for the general public, thus reaching out to a wider audience. In this endeavor he has conducted numerous television programs on classical subjects including coinage.

"His association with the ANS is of long standing. He became an Associate member in 1953, was elected a Fellow in 1955 and a Life Fellow in 1964. From 1963 to 1983 he served as a Council Member and from 1965 to 1983 as Chairman of the Publication Committee. In 1975 he was named a Benefactor of the Society.

"But perhaps his most important contribution to numismatic knowledge is his ability to teach others - his generosity in sharing and disseminating the fruit of his labor is well remembered by those who have had the privilege of his mentorship.

"It is in view of his many significant accomplishments in furthering the science of numismatics that it gives the American Numismatic Society great pleasure to award this year's Archer M. Huntington Medal Award to Professor Theodore V. Buttrey, Jr."

Professor Buttrey expressed his deep appreciation for the award which he characterized as the "top honor in the field." Recalling the number of times that he, as a member of the Society and its Council, had been present at previous Huntington Award ceremonies, he noted that perhaps Otto Morkholm, recipient in 1981, had best expressed the feelings of honorees when he said that he had "looked through the list of previous recipients and marveled at them and wondered what he was doing in this place and decided, 'Why not?' "

Stating that he had first set foot in the ANS some 45 years ago, and since had never been away for very long, Buttrey expressed his admiration for the Society's collections. library, and personnel that together make possible the work of scholars which, in turn, the ANS finds worthy of recognition. Finally, he noted that he was accepting the award "as a measure not of what I have done but of things to come; a reminder of what is yet to be completed, " referring to the projects cited by Mark Salton as in progress. Buttrey concluded "If I fail in that, you may have the medal back!"

Following his acceptance of the award medal, Buttrey (introduced by his former student, now Chief Curator of the ANS, William E. Metcalf), discussed the problem of "Western American Gold Bars, " which he identified as a series of closely related ingots produced in the names of western mines and assayers and mostly purporting to originate in California and to date from the 1850s and 1860s, the days of the gold rush. Buttrey asserted that historical evidence supporting their origin is lacking and his research indicates that the bars themselves were unknown before the 1950s.


Saltus Medal Award to Nicola Moss

On February 17, one day after one of the winter's seemingly endless series of snowstorms, a large number of friends of the medal made their way to the ANS for the award of the J. Sanford Saltus Medal to Nicola Moss, an English artist. Moss, who lived in Minnesota last year, has many friends among American medalists, who joined with Society members and the public to applaud her as she received the Saltus Award for Signal Achievement in the Art of the Medal. In accepting the award medal, Moss gave the audience an overview to her approach to medallic creation, which draws strongly on personal experiences and imagery.

Among Moss's longtime admirers in attendance was the featured speaker at the meeting, Philip Attwood, of the Department of Coins and Medals of the British Museum. Attwood's talk was entitled "An Art and an Industry: Medal Making in Britain in the 19th Century. " In this original and stimulating presentation, he traced the emergence of a thriving medallic industry in Victorian England, especially in Birmingham. He touched on issues of interest to all in the audience, which included makers, collectors, scholars, and admirers of the medal.

The meeting was accompanied by the opening of two exhibits in the Society's East Hall. "Nicola Moss, a Retrospective" featured an extensive display of the Saltus recipient's work, mostly on loan from her own collection. Among those pieces of special interest were a large cast version of the artist's portrait of Charles Darwin, which was adapted for her popular medal for the Society of Medallists; a setting of her Saint Dunstan Millennium medal in an oak casket; and a series of medals done jointly with her husband Simon Beeson which draw on their experiences with ice fishing in Minnesota.

The other exhibit, "The English Medal," was curated by ANS Curator of Medals Alan Stahl and installed by Curatorial Assistant Elena Stolyarik. It was based on the Society's strong holdings of English medals and decorations, supplemented with important loans from the collections of Mark and Lottie Salton and Jonathan Kagan. Among the interesting pieces on display were the medal made for Lord Baltimore, one of the earliest with an American connection, and the insignia from the Garter King at Arms, one of the rarest of the Society's holdings of English orders.

A new feature was introduced into the proceedings with a workshop for medalists given by Nicola Moss before the formal meeting, an event sponsored by the American Medallic Sculpture Association. The day ended on a traditional note, with many of the assembled group continuing the festivities at the Cedar Tavern in Greenwich Village.