Correction: Currency Auction story

Correction: Currency Auction story

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) -- In a story June 12 about the sale of an 1891 silver certificate, The Associated Press reported erroneously that the transaction was made at an auction. It was sold in a private transaction by an auction house.

A corrected version of the story is below:

1891 currency sells for $2.6M in Calif.

$1,000 silver certificate from 1891 sells for $2.6 million in California

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) -- A silver certificate worth $1,000 when it was printed in 1891 has sold in a private transaction by an auction house in Southern California for $2.6 million.

Stack's Bowers Galleries of Irvine says the certificate is one of only two of its kind still in existence. The other is on display at the Smithsonian Institution.

Silver certificates were government-issued documents that could be exchanged for silver dollar coins. They were circulated from 1878 until 1923.

Wednesday's transaction came during a closed sale of 85 pieces of paper currency from a private collection. Stack's Bowers says the sale is a record for a paper currency transaction.

The buyer wishes to remain anonymous.