Coin dealer Hans Schulman (1913-1990) of New York City was born in the Netherlands to a family of numismatists. He studied at the Sorbonne in Paris before coming to the United States. In 1946 he published The Coin Collectors Almanac and he coauthored The Investors Guide to United States Coins in 1986.
Willy Schwabacher was a German numismatist who hailed from a line of numismatists. His father, Heinrich Wilhelm Schwabacher (1852–1908), and grandfather, Adoph E. Cahn, were coin dealers, and his cousins, Herbert A. Cahn and Erich B. Cahn, were also scholars of numismatics. He worked in the coin cabinet of the National Museum of Denmark from 1939 to 1943, when he fled the Gestapo to Sweden, where he spent much of the rest of his life.
Euripides S. Sepheriades was a coin collector active in Athens in the 1950s and 60s. He is mentioned in the preface to "Euboian League and its Coinage" by William P. Wallace (1956) and in the provenance for two coins (62.568: https://collections.mfa.org/objects/3519 and 63.1518: https://collections.mfa.org/objects/3554) acquired by MFA Boston in 1962-3.
Henri Arnold Seyrig (10 November 1895 – 21 January 1973) was a French archaeologist, numismatist, and historian of antiquities. He was general director of antiquities of Syria and Lebanon since 1929 and director during more than twenty years of the Institute of archaeology of Beirut.
Josephine Platner Shear was an American classical archaeologist. She received her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1924 and her M.A. from Columbia University in 1928. She was a fellow at the American School for Classical Studies in Athens from 1939-40. She excavated primarily in Corinth, but also published on the coinage of Athens. In 1931, she married Theodore Leslie Shear. They had one child, Theodore Leslie Shear, Jr (1938).
Leslie Theodore Shear, Jr. (born 1938) was an American classical archaeologist and the son of Leslie Theodore Shear, Sr. and Josephone Platner Shear, both archaeologists. He received his undergraduate and graduate degrees at Princeton University and held a fellowship at the American School for Classical Studies at Athens in 1959-60. He was a professor at Bryn Mawr from 1964-7, and then returned to Princeton as a professor for much of the rest of his career. He excavated numerous sites in Greece and Sicily, but spent the most time at Mykene.
Chemical engineer Warren B. Snow (b. 1919?) of Nashua, New Hampshire, became a member of the American Numismatic Society in 1961. He was a collector of large and small U.S. cents with a particular interest in large proof cents.
The Society of the Cincinnati, is a hereditary society with branches in the United States and France, founded in 1783, to preserve the ideals and fellowship of officers of the Continental Army who served in the Revolutionary War.
Raphael (Raph) E. Solomon (d. 1992) of New York City became a member of the American Numismatic Society in 1952 and eventually was made a fellow (1986) and a patron (1986) of the Society.