The 4.2 K and 27 K current-carrying performance of a high-temperature superconducting (HTS) coil was measured in background fields up to 22.54 T generated by a hybrid magnet (Hybrid III) at the MIT Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory. The coil, 40 mm winding i.d., 108 mm winding o.d., and 113 mm high, consists of 17 double pancakes, each wound with silver-sheathed BSCCO-2223 tapes. Each pancake is the product of a react-and-wind method. In total, the test coil contains similar to 1200 m of BSCCO-2223 conductor weighing similar to 7 kg. Prior to the measurements in Hybrid III, the coil was tested in zero background field in the temperature range from 4.2 to 77 K. It was coupled to a Gifford-McMahon type cryocooler and at 15 K generated a peak field of 2.1 T; at 18 K, it generated 1.9 T, operating continuously for similar to 50 h. In a 22.54 T background field of Hybrid Ill, the coil reached critical currents of 116.5 A ([J(c)](sc), critical current density based on the BSCCO cross-sectional area only, of 261 A/mm(2)) at 4.2 K and 67 A ([J(c)](sc)=150 A/mm(2)) at 27 K, establishing record net fields at respective temperatures of 24.0 and 23.4 T for HTS magnets. These currents correspond to overall winding current densities of 47 and 27 A/mm(2). High-field critical current data for short samples of the tape of the same formulation at 4.2 and 27 K are also presented. Although a [J](sc) of 261 A/mm(2) at 24 T and 4.2 K for the test coil is significantly less than similar to 600 A/mm(2) for the short samples at the same operating point, if factors such as length, bending, and even differences in defining critical current are considered, the coil and short samples have nearly the same critical current performance. Electromagnetic stresses do not seem to have any negative effects on coil performance. Record fields of 24.0 and 23.4 T were achieved after the test coil had experienced, over a period of 15 months, 20 thermal cycles between room temperature and cryogenic temperatures. (C) 1995 American Institute of Physics.