In 1974, Reno stock investor and real estate man, LaVere Redfield, passed away at the age of 77 years. LaVere was born in Utah and his father died when LaVere was an infant. Despite inheriting a multi-million dollar oil rig tool company from his father, the family struggled during the early Depression years. When LaVere was 24 years old, he married wife, Nell, and moved to Los Angeles where he started investing in stocks.
Somehow, Redfield had a talent for buying stocks at prices that had been beaten down on the open market. He was able to make more money that way during the Great Depression of the 1930s than in times of prosperity. With his profits from his stock investments, Redfield started purchasing real estate at tax sales and oil wells coming out of bankruptcy. In 1935, he heard of the threat of a California State Income Tax, so he decided to relocate to Reno.
LaVere and Nell bought a 15-room fieldstone house and surrounding farm at Mount Rose and Forest streets in southwest Reno and started converting much of his wealth into silver dollars. His appearance in public was nothing like one would expect of a wealthy person. He drove around in an old beat-up Chevy pickup and wore casual flannel shirts and blue jeans wherever he went.
In Reno, Redfield dabbled at being a potato farmer for a while, then started buying large parcels of land in the Mount Rose and Lake Tahoe areas. He also bought up parcels being given up by the Southern Pacific Company from the days when the railroad had been granted every other section of land for development.
LaVere loved to gamble and was often seen in his usual garb at casinos playing roulette and blackjack. He was known to win or lose up to $250,000 at a session, but if he won, he would always ask to be paid in silver dollars. Casinos in those days used real silver dollars like modern casinos use chips today. Some casino dealers knew him well enough they would even let him spin the roulette wheel. Sometimes after a winning session, LaVere would treat an attractive dealer to dinner.
Whenever Redfield made money on a real estate transaction, he would ask the bank to pay him with canvas bank bags, each containing 1,000 silver dollars. He routinely took these home in his pickup truck and slid them down a coal chute into the basement of his house. There were times when thieves broke into the house and stole thousands of dollars worth of coins and jewelry.
In 1952, Redfield had to serve 18 months in jail and paid a $60,000 fine for income tax evasion after police investigating the robberies determined income taxes hadn’t been paid on his gambling winnings.
Upon LaVere’s death in 1974, his estate was estimated in the millions. Executors and the IRS found 680 bags of gold and silver dollars hidden away behind a false wall in the basement of the house. There were 407,283 Morgan and Peace dollars; 351,259 of these were uncirculated. This stash of silver coins weighed more than 22,000 pounds or 11 tons! The coins were divided up and sold at auction, a few at a time, so as to not impact coin prices adversely. The price paid by the winning dealer at the auction for the hoard was $7.3 million. The price today for the entire collection would be much higher. Remember, these coins were gathered when each coin was valued at $1. Today, even a common date silver dollar is worth about $22. Disregarding premium prices for rare coin specimens, the silver value alone of the silver dollars in Redfield’s hoard would be around $9 million in today’s market.
This article is by Dayton author and historian Dennis Cassinelli, who can be contacted on his blog at denniscassinelli.com. All Dennis’ books sold through this publication will be at a 50 percent discount plus $3 for each shipment for postage and packaging.