What this page covers
Topic: Van Niekerk Forgery 1900
Purpose: Identification, specifications, mintages, and collector guidance.
How to use: Quick facts first, then the detailed tables below.
Coin Reference
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From the Journal · Mysteries & Forgeries

The perfect forgery.

Sometime around 1900, the Van Niekerk operation produced 1900 Kruger Ponds so accurate that they "appeared to have been struck with original dies." Mint-condition examples, indistinguishable from the genuine article on cursory examination. Decades later, in a series of interviews with Prof Francois Malan and Glen Schoeman, Tommy Sasseen — the South African Mint die-cutter — explained how it was done. This page assembles the published record.

Curated by Ben & Johan Ungerer · The Jardines Curatorial Desk

Coin
1900 Kruger Pond
Operation
Van Niekerk
Witness
Tommy Sasseen
Primary source
Malan, Kruger Gold (2019)

The three acts

Act I
Act II
Act III
— The technical assessment —

The forgeries "appeared to have been struck with original dies." Mint-condition, period-correct gold, technically struck rather than cast — the case is significant not because it succeeded once, but because the method, once available, was repeatable.

— Summary of Nortje's three-part WCNS treatment

What the record tells us

A note on authentication

Every 1900 Kruger Pond is a question.

The Perfect Forgery case is the strongest argument in South African numismatics for the value of professional third-party grading on high-end ZAR gold. A raw 1900 Kruger Pond — offered without certification by NGC, PCGS, or SANGS — cannot be authenticated by visual inspection alone. The technical means demonstrated by the Van Niekerk operation produced coins indistinguishable from genuine pieces to the trained eye.

For collectors building serious ZAR cabinets, the practical takeaways: (1) Buy 1900 Kruger Ponds only in modern third-party encapsulation. (2) Treat the encapsulator's authenticity guarantee as a meaningful warranty. (3) Where a piece is offered raw, demand a credible provenance chain that pre-dates the period in which Van Niekerk material would have entered the market. The Perfect Forgery case is the reason these are not paranoid precautions but routine due diligence.

The references

  • Nortje, Pierre H.The Perfect Forgery (Parts 1, 2 & 3). Western Cape Numismatic Society article archive. The three-part essay assembles the court records, archival material, and witness testimony into the most thorough published treatment of the case.
  • Malan, Francois.Kruger Gold (2019). The first book-length treatment incorporating the Sasseen interviews. The primary published source for the technical method.
  • Sasseen, Tommy.Interviews with Prof Francois Malan and Glen Schoeman. South African Mint die-cutter; the technical witness whose account underpins the published record. See also Sasseen's biographical entry on the People Behind the Coins page.
  • Schoeman, Glen.Dealer accounts and verification correspondence. Co-interviewer with Malan; contributing primary source on the dealer-side response to the forgeries.
  • Court records and international archives.Documented across Nortje's three-part essay. Multi-jurisdictional paper trail covering the original case.

Revision history

15 May 2026 Initial build · v3 locked theme · sourced from Nortje's three-part Perfect Forgery essay (WCNS), Malan's Kruger Gold (2019), and the Sasseen interviews preserved through Malan and Schoeman.

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