1996 Royal Hawaiian Mint RIMPAC Variety 2

A recent eBay auction listed a newly identified  variety of the 1996 Royal Hawaiian Mint RIMPAC medal. The obverse feature a hula girl instead of the attack on Pearl Harbor.

This is the version (page 3, bottom) listed in Waifs in Gold Boots (RHM database).

http://www.royalhawaiianmint.com/newsletters/34-1996_November_Annual_Christmas_Issue.pdf

This is the new variety http://www.ebay.com/itm/1996-RIMPAC-Hawwaiis-Hula-Extends-Aloha-to-RIMPAC-Silver-Proof-Islands-of-ALOHA-/262414279354?hash=item3d191c22ba%3Ag%3Ar0sAAOSwUuFW1iQH&nma=true&si=RFHj9A%252FaN5OKcR%252BoF4fkxElLEfU%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557

If you carefully look at the listing of the RIMPAC in Waifs in Gold Boots, the number 165 is listed under the 420. It is my best guess that the RIMPAC hula girl medal was to be filled in after the Pearl Harbor RIMPAC medal.

Crackout Urge Reveals a Mystery

I was seeking to solve the missing serial number on my incorrectly labeled PCGS HK-534 Alaska-Hawaii Statehood medal (left in picture).

I took a towel and mallet. Within seconds the statehood medal was de-slabbed without damaged.

As I was  looking  for the serial number on its edge, I found none……

The medal is genuine, but without an edge serial number….

 

Previous blog of this medal:  https://thehawaiiananumismatist.com/2015/08/30/pcgs-incorrect-identification/

hawaii_error

 

 

Interesting Presentation from the Bailey House Museum

I was reviewing images taken at the Bailey House Museum (Edward Bailey is the maternal great great great great great grandfather of my son). Crude image, but it discusses the dies used to create the coat of arms on the Kalakaua royal stationary. I’m familiar with the center figure 2. as I own several stationary specimens with this design.

From this documented research by John Tanaka, you can surmise that King Kalakaua must have also been disappointed with the results on his one dala coin.

kalakaua dies.jpg