A Couple Renovating a Kitchen And Found 264 Rare Gold Coins

Rare Gold Coins

An amazing collection of rare gold coins found by a family renovating their kitchen has sold at auction for £754,000 ($842,330).

The cache of 264 coins English gold coins from 1610-1727 was found when the unnamed couple dug up the kitchen floor of their house in 2019.

The coin collection is supposed to have been once owned by the Fernley-Maisters, a family of traders from Hull, East Yorkshire, who made their wealth in Baltic trading, BBC News reported.

Lot 264 of the coin hoard
Lot 264 of the coin hoard 
Spink Auction House

The auction house Spink & Son told the BBC that the lots garnered international attention, with private collectors from America, Europe, Australia, China, and Japan flocking to the sale.

Auctioneer Gregory Edmund told Insider in a statement: “I have never seen a response to an auction like that before, and the results testify it, my provisional estimate was demolished three times over. It dwarfed any pre-conceived expectations and set dozens of world records along the way.”

The highest-fetching coin, dating back to 1720, sold for £62,400 ($69,710), Spink & Son said. It was listed as the “Unbelievable Mint Error” gold coin because it was struck in the reign of King George I with no head but two tails.

The couple found the coins underneath concrete and 18th-century floorboards in their kitchen. The treasure trove was “120 years of English history hidden in a pot the same size as a soda can,” Edmund said, per the BBC.

“The story was extraordinary, and that is what achieved the mind-blowing result. I do hope people think before ripping up their floors, though,” he said in a statement.

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