The Richard Hauck Quartz Collection

Selections from the
RICHARD HAUCK QUARTZ COLLECTION

Here you will see selections from a large and diverse collection of over 800 quartz specimens from worldwide historic localities, assembled by Richard Hauck over 50 years of collecting and cherrypicking from the dozens of collections bought and sold as a dealer and as a collector. Hauck, a well-known New Jersey collector. is also one of the founders of the Franklin Mineral Museum in Franklin and of the Sterling Hill Mining Museum in nearby Ogdensburg, which he currently operates. More updates will come over the next few months here and to our auctions. Most have old labels or are clearly historic pieces! I am not usually a lover of quartz as a species, but then I have never had a collection with so many unique and hard-to-obtain examples of quartz before, either - a collection that teaches me about styles and locations I had not known before from personal examination, in fact. This one, to me, was a no-brainer, full of things you just couldn't find, much less buy, elsewhere. I am therefore very honored to present another really fun assemblage from the suites of Richard Hauck's longtime collections....read on!

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RHQTZ-01 - Amethyst - £ 1552 SOLD
Schemnitz, Slovakia
small cabinet, 7.8 x 5.6 x 5.5 cm
ex.  Clarence S. Bement
ex.  Richard Hauck
ex.  Smithsonian Institution

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Amethyst - Schemnitz, Slovakia
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Amethyst - Schemnitz, Slovakia
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Amethyst - Schemnitz, Slovakia
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Amethyst - Schemnitz, Slovakia

This specimen is a very important old classic for amethyst, and a scarcely seen item in even the most prominent old collections. It concists of a plate of white quartz on rock matrix, upon which are the most intensely purple gem crystals of amethyst you can imagine, to 2 cm. They sparkle like glass, and these are so treasured in Europe, that I have seen specimens of half this quality for more money, in euros no less, at Munich. This is, however, a really good example in that it is aesthetic, and not just representative. It is not prisitne, but is nearly so with only one break of consequence to a crystal and a few minor dings otherwise (and probably is 120-plus years old, so you should give a little leniency!). Consider that at one time these were the BEST purple amethyst crystals for the collector in the world, for overall quality, and a treasured few specimens commanded their weight in gold at the time. Before the discovery of the Mexican and Bolivian crystals, after all, where would you get such beautiful and intense amethyst of this quality? The last one I saw of this size and calibre, a similar specimen from the Ed David collection, was one for which he himself had paid more than the asking price here although they are not too dissimilar. Note an inked black arrow on the back of this specimen was made by the early-1900s AMNH curator Gratacap in curating the display specimens from the Bement collection after it was donated to the AMNH by financier JP Morgan, who purchased the collection after Bement's death. The arrow denotes the rear direction on the shelf on which the specimen was to be placed, thus showing its proper orientation on the display shelves of the museum. As the MinRecord archive states, Clarence Sweet Bement was one of the greatest mineral collectors of all time, from around 1866 to 1900 known for his high level of taste in specimens - even in the oddities, rarities, and classics. The man had, be they rare or pretty or ugly or common, the best of the era. Heck, if this were Mexican with such deep color, it would already be 2k anyhow...Click on this link to see a copy of the original early 1900s accession book from the American Museum archives: CLICK HERE



RHQTZ-02 - Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - £ 3880 SOLD
Goscheneralp, Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
small cabinet, 7.8 x 5.6 x 5.5 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Goscheneralp, Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Goscheneralp, Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Goscheneralp, Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland



RHQTZ-03 - Amethyst scepter - £ 291 SOLD
Eonyang (Onyong), Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea
miniature, 5 x 5 x 3 cm
ex.  Dr. William Sanborn
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Amethyst scepter - Eonyang (Onyong), Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea
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Amethyst scepter - Eonyang (Onyong), Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea
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Amethyst scepter - Eonyang (Onyong), Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea
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Amethyst scepter - Eonyang (Onyong), Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea

Bill Sanborn's collection was noted for an extensive suite of Asian minerals, and this is as superb a specimen for the classic old Korean amethysts as any I have seen. It is a very aesthetic, balanced, choice miniature, complete all around. There is a minor ding in each termination, but it still displays very nicely, I think, and the balance of the piece distracts the eye from the two admitted dings atop (though reduce the price, they must!). Interestingly, the crystals are slightly included by geothite, according to the label. Visually, the stunning translucent gem purple sceptres contrast markedly with the stalks...again, a true classic example for this locality, just like wha tyou would see in old books.



RHQTZ-04 - Quartz on Quartz - £ 259 SOLD
Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada
miniature, 5 x 5 x 3 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Quartz on Quartz - Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada
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Quartz on Quartz - Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada



RHQTZ-05 - Calcite on Quartz - £ 388 SOLD
Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada
miniature, 5 x 5 x 3 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Calcite on Quartz - Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada
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Calcite on Quartz - Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada
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Calcite on Quartz - Black Rapids, Lyndhurst, Ontario, Canada



RHQTZ-06 - Rutilated Quartz (floater) - £ 938 SOLD
Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
small cabinet, 8.0 x 4.0 x 2.1 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil

An exceptional specimen that has to be more rutile than quartz, given the incredible quantity of rutiles inside. I don't think i have ever seen such an infested quartz specimen (infested? invested?) from this locality. Especially when backlit, it glows with color. The crystal is a complete floater all around and pristine save only for a small divot out of one bottom edge on the backside. The shape of the crystal is unusual in that it appears somewhat pseudocubic in form, not as prismatic as normally you would expect (and especially from this locle where all tend to have the same habit). I am not normally big on these, but this one is VERY special and dramatic! From the Dr. Eugene Sensel collection.



RHQTZ-07 - Quartz "cross" of Japan Law twins - £ 259 SOLD
San Pedro Mine, Golden , New Mexico, USA
small cabinet, 7.3 x 6.7 x 5.2 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

Sorry, we have no images of this specimen at present.



RHQTZ-08 - Quartz (Japan law twin) - £ 938 SOLD
Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
small cabinet, 7.5 x 6.1 x 2.7 cm
ex.  Frederick A. Canfield
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Quartz (Japan law twin) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (Japan law twin) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (Japan law twin) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (Japan law twin) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan

These original Japanese quartzes from which Japan law twinning was described initially are old classics of the late 1800s and early 1900s, rarely seen for sale in sizable specimens of quality today! It is, sadly, damaged on both on the lower-left side on and just past the prismatic associate crystals's termination; as well as with a slight cleave on the back of the other termination (not seen from front). Still, overall , this is a superbly aesthetic, dramatic piece for Japan, with elegant display. Given this, and the historic importance of the piece, I can live with a little damage so long as the eye doesn't go right to it (which it does not). The old Frederick Canfield label dates this to 1914, though it probably came to him already in an old collection as these came out even in the late 1800s, one would think. Courtesy of Alfredo Petrov: "mura" means village, "Kai" is now Yamanashi, so it's Miyamoto village in Yamanashi Prefecture.Interestingly, I have never seen a genuine Canfield label on a specimen for sale. Looking up the collection on the Mineralogical Record's Archives site, I found this note: Canfield bequeathed his entire (personal) mineral collection, plus a $50,000 endowment for its support and enlargement, to the Smithsonian Institution.. A comment from Smithsonian Collection Manager Dr. Paul Pohwat on the piece: An examination of the label shows that the specimen left Canfields possession and never saw NMNH. The lettered "Presented by…July 1914" is not in Canfield's hand, I would guess that the giftee wrote that. As for the piece coming from an old collection to Canfield I feel sure that he purchased it from one of the many fine mineral purveyors extant at the time, purchasing entire collections was not Canfield’s way. Also keep in mind that NMNH did not receive the entire Canfield collection only the cataloged portion, Harvard purchased the uncataloged portion, and these have Canfield labels as well. However, as this label has a definite catalog number I am leaning towards the ‘presented to another collector’ theory.



RHQTZ-09 - Rutilated Quartz (floater) - £ 1293 SOLD
Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
small cabinet, 6.6 x 5.5 x 5.1 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil
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Rutilated Quartz (floater) - Ibitiara, Minas Gerais, Brazil

An exceptional and rare CLUSTER of rutilated quartzes - so often found in singles or in damaged and unwieldy clunky clusters. This one, though, is among the brightest, showiest examples I have seen AND is a good size for the collector (as Sensel agreed with , writing "exceptional" on his label when he appraised the collection in 1990). This piece is nearly pristine, with just a few small "kisses" or dings on some crystal tips....but they go unnoticed amoidst the crazy geometry of the rutile inclusions and the lustre, unless you look very closely. Especially when backlit, the piece glows with color. I am not normally big on these, but this one is VERY special and dramatic! I have seldom seen a cluster of this material I love, perhaps just a few pieces in the last twnty years? From the Dr. Eugene Sensel collection.



RHQTZ-10 - Quartz (faden) - £ 1617 SOLD
Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
cabinet, 11.5 x 5.2 x 3.0 cm
ex.  Allan Crunden
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Quartz (faden) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (faden) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (faden) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan
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Quartz (faden) - Miyamoto village, Kohu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan

A strange Japanese quartz, showing a clear and dramatic faden line down the middle more characteristic of alpine quartzes than anything I have seen from japan before. in fact, I have never seen a Japanese faden of any quality before. This one was probably found before they had described the phenomenon, and erroneously labelled as a "distorted twin". It is miraculously one of the best-preserved old Japanese quartzes from this locality that I have seen, and has no damage save only a small nick at the bottom. Otherwise, it is pristine and complete all around! The Allan Crunden Collection was one of the major collections on the East Coast of the mid-1900s.



RHQTZ-11 - Quartz (with John Sinkankas sketch) - £ 485 SOLD
Ellenville, New York, USA
small cabinet, 8.1 x 3.8 x 2.6 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Quartz (with John Sinkankas sketch) - Ellenville, New York, USA
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Quartz (with John Sinkankas sketch) - Ellenville, New York, USA
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Quartz (with John Sinkankas sketch) - Ellenville, New York, USA
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Quartz (with John Sinkankas sketch) - Ellenville, New York, USA

This is a darned good Ellenville quartz anyways: doubly-terminated, pristine, and complete all around! However, as a bonus, you get a to-scale hand-sketch made of the piece by John Sinkankas, well known author and artist. Old classic locality!



RHQTZ-12 - Smoky Quartz and Fluorite - £ 485 SOLD
Varmlandsberg mine, Nordmark, Filipstad, Varmland, Sweden
small cabinet, 9.0 x 5.6 x 3.6 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Smoky Quartz and Fluorite - Varmlandsberg mine, Nordmark, Filipstad, Varmland, Sweden
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Smoky Quartz and Fluorite - Varmlandsberg mine, Nordmark, Filipstad, Varmland, Sweden
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Smoky Quartz and Fluorite - Varmlandsberg mine, Nordmark, Filipstad, Varmland, Sweden

A strange quartz specimen that seems to have beta-quartz shaped smoky crystals, on matrix with little green fluorites. These smokies are REALLY dark, opaque, and strikingly sharp. The contrast on the green is interesting, too. Never seen one like it, myself



RHQTZ-13 - Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - £ 614 SOLD
Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA
small cabinet, 7.4 x 3.4 x 2.6 cm
ex.  Ernest Weidhass
ex.  George Kunz
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA
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Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA
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Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA
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Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA
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Quartz (sceptre on Gem Smoky Quartz) - Pike's Peak, Colorado, USA

Another bizarre quartz, in a collection full of oddities! This one has a sceptre growth that is more like a "cap" of milky quartz overtopping a GEM smoky quartz crystal. On their own, boring singles. Together, the contrast is really striking. Said to be from George Kunz to a collector whose collection Hauck acquired long ago (which had other Kuzn attributions as well, and I believe it).



RHQTZ-14 - Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - £ 1940
Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
small cabinet, 8.5 x 6.2 x 3.5 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck

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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland

This is a dramatic and rare, nearly-colorless gwindel from the classic Swiss locality for deeply smoky gwindels! This crystal is a single twisted quartz of the classic style, with no damage and complete all around. It was not, as most are, broken off matrix leaving a gash on the bottom. Rather, this is a floater with a bit of matrix attached to the bottom of the quartz, also terminated (if ingrown with matrix). The twist on this one is VERY pronounced and dramatic! The shots made to show the twist show a pale green tint that is not there in person, though.



RHQTZ-15 - Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - £ 2910
Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
small cabinet, 7.9 x 7.3 x 3.0 cm
ex.  Richard Hauck
ex.  William Vaux

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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland
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Smoky Quartz (gwindel) - Göschenen Valley, Canton Uri, Switzerland

A DEEPLY smoky quartz gwindel, so deeply colored that it is almost purple in color when backlit strongly, from the important collection of William S. Vaux



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Rob Lavinsky, rob@irocks.com

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