Edward C. Rochette

A lifelong collector, Rochette has devoted nearly all his adult life
to ANA service. Joining the Association's staff as editor of the
ANA's magazine in 1966, he spent most of his first 20 years as executive
vice president. He retired from his staff position, and in 1987 was
elected to the ANA Board of Governors, serving as vice president from
1989 to 1991 and president from 1991 to 1993.
In 1998, at the recommendation of the ANA President's Advisory
Council and with the approval of the Board of Governors, Rochette
returned to the ANA staff as interim executive director. A year later,
he was asked to take the position permanently, and in 2001 his
contracted was extended two years.
He stepped aside from the day to-day operations of the Association on
January 1, 2003, taking on the role of senior advisor responsible for
fund-raising until his retirement on July 31.
During his second tenure as executive director, Rochette oversaw the
complete remodeling and expansion of the ANA's Money Museum and Library;
creation of the Harry W. Bass Jr. Gallery of United States gold coins by
the Bass foundation; and the make-over of the Association's
Numismatist magazine, now in its 116th year of publication.
As a member of the ANA staff and Board of Governors, Rochette was
instrumental in the recovery of some of numismatics' greatest rarities,
including an 1804 Draped Bust silver dollar belonging to Willis du Pont.
The coin now resides in the Smithsonian Institution National Numismatic
Collection.
Thirty-five years ago, Rochette launched the week-long ANA Summer
Seminar in Colorado Springs with 17 students and instructors.
The two-week Summer Seminar now attracts 500 students and
instructors.
A native of Worcester, Massachusetts, Rochette served in the United
States Navy during World War II, and attended Washington University in
St. Louis, and Clark University in Worcester.
A prolific writer, he has authored several numismatic books,
including The Romance of Coin Collecting, Medallic
Portraits of John F. Kennedy and Making Money: Rogues and
Rascals Who've Made Their Own. For many years, he wrote a
weekly coin column nationally syndicated by the Los Angeles Times and a
monthly column for COINage magazine, and he continues to pen
his monthly column The Other Side of the Coin for the ANA's
Numismatist magazine.
Before joining the ANA staff, Rochette was executive editor of
Numismatic News, where he remained a regular contributor until
he returned to the ANA staff.
Rochette is a recipient of the ANA's Glenn Smedley Memorial and
Lifetime Achievement Awards, Medal of Merit, and the Association's
highest honor, the Farran Zerbe Memorial Award for Distinguished
Service. He also is a Numismatic Hall of Fame inductee.
Rochette served on the United States Assay Commission, was named a
Numismatic Ambassador by Numismatic News, and has received the
Numismatic Literary Guild's coveted Clemy Award and Sandra Rae Mishler
gold medal for original research.
After leaving the Board of Governors in 1993, Rochette was
instrumental in developing the numismatic exhibit at the International
Olympic Committee's at its museum in Lausanne, Switzerland, and has
served as a numismatic consultant to the United States Olympic Committee
and the United States Air Force Academy.
Loved by all who know him and respected by the entire numismatic
community, in 2005, the ANA Museum was named in his honor.
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