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Showing posts with label silver dollars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silver dollars. Show all posts

Trade Dollar 1875

Federal officials faced a dilemma in the being after the Civil War. The Comstock Lode and other Western mines were producing large quantities of silver, but the government could use only limited amounts of it in currency. This seems puzzling in retrospect, for silver coins were infrequent in circulation (a lingering legacy of wartime billboard), and Americans presumably would have welcomed main infusions of silver coins. Nevertheless Mint officials feared that new silver coins would be subjected to notice as well, since the marketplace was sopping with paper money, with fractional currency natural of wartime basic. People would have been only too glad to replace these notes, which brought minus than plump face help, for precious-metal currency.

For a time, the miners found outlets for their silver, regularly in change form, in exotic markets. Canada, Latin America and Europe all absorbed significant quantities during the 1860s. Nevertheless then, for many reasons these markets became glutted. In Europe, for example, Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck established a gold model for Germany after unifying the country in 1871 and speedily dumped gigantic amounts of silver on the international promote.

For the miners and their potent allies in Washington these developments were doubly disturbing: Not only was it hard to sell their silver, but the promote treasure was steadily declining. Initially, change did suggest one outflow valve: Under a long- ranking law, silver could be deposited with the Mint for conversion into silver coins, for which it could then be exchanged. Having no other equipped conduit, miners took lead of this one. Invariably, they chose silver dollars, the one denomination that hadn't been changed when silver coins were condensed in mass (and precious-metal subject) in 1853. As a manage significance, silver money mintages soared above one million in both 1871 and 1872.

Nevertheless with the Coinage Act of 1873, Congress stopped this loophole by suspending expand production of silver dollars. And that's where the trade buck came in: Flexing their muscle, the mining benefit won liking for this new silver coin-one that would, in scheme at slightest, not only offer an opening for the metal, but also open a full new souk for it in a corner that was already receiving Congressional awareness.

The market in doubt was Asia, particularly China. Some U.S. silver had found its way to that territory previously, but now a plump-fledged violent was planned. The Chinese had shown an absolute preference for silver coins, and up to then the volume of American trade with China had been carried out with Spanish and Mexican dollars. The trade dough's architects set out to replace those rivals by bountiful the new coin a senior silver content. They even had it decorated on the coin: "420 GRAINS, 900 FINE."

At first glance, the trade dough looks much like a recurring silver money. It's the same diameter and about the same mass as its predecessor, the Seated Liberty dough, and its portraiture is similar: a seated female chart representing Liberty on the frontage and a naturalistic eagle on the reversal-designs organized by Mint Chief Engraver William Barber.

In compare to the new trade dough, the uniform U.S. silver dough weighed just 412.5 grains, and the Mexican buck weighed only 416. Nevertheless the architects had miscalculated; still it weighed vaguely less, the Mexican coin had a senior sheerness and therefore enclosed somewhat more innocent silver. The sharp Chinese recognized this and, in many provinces, gave the U.S. coin sharply shrift, favoring the Mexican coin.

That's not to say the trade buck wasn't used. On the opposing, over 27 million went overseas and found their way into Asian retail, many later being sent onto India in trade for opium. Numerous pieces show chop signs-distinctive Chinese symbols-located on them by merchants to attest to their authenticity. Nevertheless treatment of the coins never approached Americans' expectations.

The trade money's prevalent problems occurred not in China but at home. In a last-detailed contract, Congress had made the coin an official tender for domestic payments up to five dollars. In 1876, millions were dumped into circulation in the United States when silver prices plummeted, making them worth substantially more as money than, as metal.

Congress swiftly revoked their official-tender status (the only time this has been done with any U.S. coin), but the seeds of momentous worry had been sown. In the postponed 1870s, employers bought up huge facts of the coins at slightly more than gold meaning (80 to 83 cents apiece) and then put them in pay envelops at face value. Merchants and banks accepted them only at gold value or unwanted them altogether, so the workforce effectively mislaid one sixth to one-fifth of their pay when that pay often amounted to less than $10 a week.

Spurning abroad and despised by many at home, the trade dough rapidly pale into stupor. After 1878, production was hanging excepting for proofs-and even those dwindled to just ten in 1884 and five in 1885.

Like many other "fantasy" coins before them, the 1884 and 1885 pieces were clandestinely struck for Mint chum William Idler and were nameless to the numismatic village pending six pieces from Dealer John sold idler's estate Haseltine in 1908. Notwithstanding their questionable cause, these two dates are viewed as great rarities nowadays.

In all, fewer than 36 million trade dollars were struck during the coin's 13-year existence, plus about 11,000 proofs. Production took place at Philadelphia, Carson City and San Francisco. The rarest sphere smacked is the 1878-CC with a mintage of 97,000, many of which develop to have been melted. All high-grade business strikes of the trade cash are scarce to non-current, leaving proofs to charge most of the order from typeface collectors.

The extraordinary beauty of originally-toned proofs entices many collectors to shot complete evidence runs (without the almost unavailable 1884 and 1885, of course). Indeed, any trade dollar is amply cherished and required in untouched train. Points to rein for show compose Liberty's ear, left knee and breast and the eagle's supervise and left wing.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Designer: William Barber
Weight: 27.22 grams
Net weight: 0.7874 oz wholesome silver
Composition: 0 .900 silver, 0.100 copper
Diameter: 38.1 mm
Edge: reeded
Minted at: Philadelphia, Carson City, San Francisco
Years Minted: 1873 to 1885
Mint blotch: On reversal below eagle and above the 'D' in the word 'dollar.'
Notes: Key meeting 1878CC due to numerous coins being melted and low mintage. Proofs are uncommon too. Many trade dollars have been counterstamped with Chinese 'chop lettering'. These marks typically lessen the coin.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Willem, John M. The United States Trade Dollar, Whitman Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1965. Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 48th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1994.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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Flowing Hair Silver Dollars 1794-1795

The money was the cornerstone of the fiscal practice devised by the Founding Fathers for the fledgling United States. More than two existence approved, however, between the time Congress authorized cash currency and the actual production of the first such coin, the Flowing Hair silver dough.

Congress itself was responsible for the break. As part of the vital Mint Act of April 2, 1792, the House and Senate specific that two key Mint officers-the chief coiner and assayer-would have to publish bonding of $10,000 each before they could work with precious metal. The requirement was onerous: It represented more than six period the annual salary of $1,500 each provided for these two officers. Understandably, they had effort gathering it-and, awaiting they did, only copper penny could proceed.

Frustrating by this roadblock in his labors to begin detailed-range money, Mint Director David Rittenhouse appealed for help to Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, the Cabinet executive then in custody of the Mint. Jefferson got Congress to decrease the bonds to $5,000 for Chief Coiner Henry Voigt and $1,000 for Assayer Albion Cox; they then put up the money and the Mint was limitless at last to produce the lasting denominations. By then it March of 1794, and the red record had price the Mint a whole production year of precious-metal change: The only coins issued in 1793 had been copper cents and half cents. (Although the Mint was established in 1792 and it struck some coins that year, all are viewed as patterns very than endorsed federal issues.)

Silver coinage started in 1794 with two denominations-the buck and half dough; both were alike in sketch (half dimes of this meeting were coined the next year). The money was deemed the most prestigious, so Mint officials firm to punch that first. Actually, the Mint had gotten a running depart on the new coins: Engraver Robert Scot had been told to arrange designs for them months before the legal scowl was untangled.

Congress had specific that the new coins should hold a target "emblematic of Liberty," and Scot accomplished this with a right-facing likeness of a childish female consider whose beard flowed liberally behind her-thus the descriptive term "Flowing Hair." The word LIBERTY appears above her, with the year below and 15 stars along the sides, symbolizing the number of states in the Union at that time. Scot is said to have intended the flowing coat to imply looseness. A sample 25-cent instance of 1792 served as Scot's exemplary for the facade; this had been planned by Joseph Wright, who died of blonde fever in 1793 after helping quickly as Mint engraver. The money's quash depicts a small, swell-winged eagle floating on an astound and surrounded by laurel twigs. Encircling this, along the border, is the motto UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The dough's "third elevation," the side, carries the inscription HUNDRED CENTS ONE DOLLAR OR UNIT, with decorations separating the lexis.

The Flowing Hair dough is faintly larger and heavier than later U.S. cartwheels like the Morgan and Peace dollars. Its authorized sheerness differs, too, but its actual delicacy doesn't, because some probing events at the Mint. Congress had specific a curious alloy of 1485/1664 silver and 179/1664 copper, for thinness of .8924+. Nevertheless Assayer Cox complained that this was too trying to achieve and, what's more, that silver coins would deed black in normal use save they were at least .900 select. He prevailed on Rittenhouse to let him use that elevated pennant, even however Congress hadn't penalized it, creating an incredible municipal where the Mint was actually breech the law of the land. This led to substantial losses for people who deposited silver gold with the Mint and took silver dollars in return, for they were being mandatory to deliver more silver per coin than the law mandatory. Eventually, some sought and obtained reimbursement.

It's supposed that the Mint struck a overall of 2,000 silver dollars in 1794, all from a distinct couple of dies. Evidently, some were abandoned as being excessively weak and may have finished up being used as coin blanks the next year or just being melted. The accepted net mintage is 1,758, with estimates of about 120-130 survivors in all grades. The whole production occurred on an unmarried day, October 15, and Voight stored many of the coins in the Mint's vaults, generous them to Rittenhouse the following May. The Director existing a few of the dollars to VIPs as souvenirs and made a heart of spending some (or exchanging them for Spanish dollars) to get the coins before the free. Rittenhouse never distributed all the coins, however, resigning due to without shape in June of 1795. This set the step for a very interesting piece of numismatic memoirs,

Almost 170 being later, in 1964, a small box of "peculiar" coins was consigned to a Christies mart in London by the family of British nobleman Major Sir Roland Denys Guy Winn, M.C., Fourth Baron St. Oswald. The box enclosed about $10 in face help of new U.S. coins, square each 1794 or 1795. Most notable of these pieces were two uncirculated 1794 dollars which brought $11,400 each at the vending. When the coins returned to the United States, the excitement generated among American collectors began to take on a life of its own. A chronicle took burrow that had one of Lord St. Oswald's ancestors itinerant to Philadelphia in 1795 and receiving the coins soon from Henry DeSaussure, Rittenhouse's successor as Mint Director. While this account makes fascinating reading and has been accepted as fact for over thirty time, latest inquiries has naked that it's based fully on guess. No family minutes or accounts fund the proposition of a trip to the United States by a St. Oswald ancestor; in fact, they lean to refute it. We don't know for certain how the coins were obtained or by whom-only that they were in the St. Oswald family's possession in 1964. Perhaps an impending numismatic researcher will be able to loosen this mystery.

Farther buck production was floating awaiting a new lobby-competent of imparting fuller, stronger strikes-could be installed. It didn't resume awaiting early May of 1795, and from then through mid-October the new tackle cranked out more than 160,000 Flowing Hair dollars dated 1795. In October, the drawing gave way to a new Draped Bust cash, making the Flowing Hair dollar a two-year capture coin.

Despite its brevity, the Flowing Hair dollar cycle is broadly calm by form (most collectors selecting the 1795 spring, because it is so much more copious than 1794). Some of the 1795 dollars have two leaves below each wing of the eagle, while others have three. Both kinds are similarly free, however. There are no records of proofs for the year, but some 1795 dollars are professed to be "specimen" strikes. Mint state pieces of both dates are very unusual. Points to first show wear are the cheek, shoulder and tresses above Liberty's temple and the eagle's breast, proceed and wing-tops.

Flowing Hair dollars are coveted collectibles, not only because of their great curiosity but also because they possess such an athletic relation with the birth of both the realm and U.S. coinage. Silver dollars are enormously accepted, so this fleeting, small cycle indeed was the outset of something big.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 39-40 millimeters Weight: 26.96 grams Composition: .8924 silver.1076 copper Edge: Lettered Net Weight: .77344 degree authentic silver

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Hodder, Michael J. "Who was Major the Lord St. Oswald?," The Asylum, Fall, 1994. Reiver, Jules, The United States Early Silver Dollars 1794 to 1804, Krause Publications, Iola, WI, 1998. Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing Co., New York, 1966. Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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Seated Liberty/No Motto Silver Dollars 1840-1873

The year was 1840. Martin Van Buren was completing a Presidential word ruined by terrible financial depression. This era, called the Hard Times, resulted from time of reckless Western land speculation and the evolution of unregulated banks issuing a flood of unsecured paper money. The prolonged depression ravished America's agriculture and trade and saw hundreds of thousands starving and unemployed.

Inheriting from President Andrew Jackson was the Van Buren Administration's loyalty in "hard money"- silver and gold-as the only unfailing warehouse of assess in compare to shaky thanks and worthless paper money. Expressing this hard money outlook, the Mint strove from 1836 to start a new circulating silver cash. No cash coin had appeared for circulation since 1804, when the last of the 1803-square Draped Bust dollars were released.

Mint Director Robert Maskell Patterson viewed the new money as the pinnacle of America's silver penny. After all, it was a fortunate worker who made even four dollars for a workweek of 76 to 80 hours of unremitting slog in this harsh era. A silver bucked was indeed a keep of wealth to millions of impoverished running-classify Americans.

An admirer of the seated Britannia on British copper penny, Patterson supposed that a seated female character would be just as "emblematic of liberty" as the heads and busts adorning the residents's money. He engaged the great study musician Thomas Sully to make sketching for his seated Liberty. Sully floating her on a sway in Grecian robes, left arm supporting a Union guard with a scroll adorned LIBERTY. Her right arm was raised and detained a staff topped with a small Liberty Cap. The Mint's assistant engraver, Christian Gobrecht, adapted the Sully sketches to bas-relief art fitting for money. The effect was the Seated Liberty create worn at one time or another on half dimes, dimes, 20-cent pieces, quarters, half dollars and dollars from 1836 through 1891.

As reworked by Gobrecht and Robert Ball Hughes, Liberty emerged with a rounded president and her dangling right arm appearing immensely long, her left patently shorter. Pattern obverses of 1836 and 1839 showed no frontage stars but placed the musician's signature in the turf or on the base. Gobrecht's novel reverses of 1836-1839 open a magnificent snatched eagle in a shining or patent sky. Unfortunately, the "No Motto" silver money of 1840-1865 deleted the innovative flying eagle, substituting the unimaginative but relaxed "sandwich lodge" bird with dropped wings and a safeguard on its breast. Liberty had no artist's signature and sat coyly in a crowd of 13 stars with the court placed below. The coins of 1840-65 do not have the motto IN GOD WE TRUST on the converse.

Mintages were commonly small by recent standards, adding only 2,895,673 coins for the cycle. The Philadelphia Minted (no mintmark) struck all dates from 1840 to 1865 inclusive; New Orleans (O), struck dollars square 1846, 1850, 1859 and 1860; the San Francisco Mint (S), struck this category money only in 1859. Mintmarks are located under the lime sphere, between the eagle's feet on the rearrange.

Tiny figures of proofs were struck of most early Philadelphia dates, but they are of great shortage. Numbers struck are not known with certainty and are gone from general handbook books. Proofs were first made for public selling in 1858 when perhaps 80 pieces were struck; later resistant mintages never exceeded 1,000 excluding for 1860, when 1,330 pieces were coined. Proof restrikes were made of the 1851 and 1852 coins. The last No Motto meeting was 1865, with 46,500 company strikes and 500 proofs made. Two 1866-dated No Motto coins are known, but these "fantasy pieces" were made somewhat later for auction to wealthy collectors. In recent years, the reality of a sole resilient 1851-O specimen has come to light, however researchers postulate that this was accidentally made by the Philadelphia "Midnight Minters," (possibly engraver George Eckfeldt and his son, Mint night watchman Theodore). In their swiftness clandestinely to sell the popular 1851 arise, they overstruck a vacant New Orleans Mint cash, the crushed 'O' mintmark still being quietly visible.

Seated dollars never circulated to any great point in the East, although facts were in daily use west of the Mississippi. The Civil War advanced restricted their circulation as the numbers of subject strikes and proofs struck contracted sharply. Bullion buyers snapped up most new silver coins for export as firmly as they were made. These coins were shipped overseas for melting, and the only U.S. Mint result most citizens saw were the new figurine cents. Coin collectors derided the Mint as "Uncle Sam's copperhead factory."

These large silver coins had some odd striking characteristics. The actual view of Liberty's lead may basis feeble detail even on perfect specimens. The fluff on the eagle's leg and the claws may also show mark of weak beat. Wear first appears on Liberty's thigh, right breast and the top of her precede. The tops of the eagle's wings chart. Because of their size and mass, uncirculated coins stored in Mint bags will show scattered link symbols. Proofs regularly are hairlined from the careless conduct of early non-numismatic owners or will show evidence of cleaning by old-time collectors.

Seating Liberty dollars have gained popularity with the utter antenna kinship since the 1970's, when the great U.S. Treasury reserve of silver dollars was liquidated, though few of them early type were found. To collectors more easy with Morgan and Peace dollars issued in the tens of millions, these formerly coins may appear scarce and vague, and indeed they are. Only a small marginal of all Seated Liberty dollars struck remain in existence today. Researcher Weimar W. White estimated that just a division continue-even in low grades.

Assembling an extensive date and mint set in reduce circulated grades is within reason, given patience and perseverance. A total set in mint kingdom will be costly, especially for examples of the 1850-O, 1851, 1852 and 1859-S. A complete run of proofs is a theoretically viable goal but one which will be unrealistic for any but the best-financed antenna.

The Seated Liberty series endless from 1866 to 1873 with the transpose motto IN GOD WE TRUST. The coinage acted of Feb. 12, 1873 ended the silver buck and abolished the official tender condition of all silver dollars struck from 1794 to 1873. This is the law later savagely denounced by the vocal partisans of released and unlimited coinage of silver as the "Crime of '73." Legal tender category was restored to the colors silver dollar under the Bland-Allison Act of 1878, which prompted the coining of millions of Morgan Dollars.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition: .900 silver.100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .77344 oz untainted silver

BIBLIOGRAPHY Alexander, David T. DeLorey, Thomas K. And Reed, P. Bradley, Coin World Comprehensive Catalog & Encyclopedia of United States Coins, New York, World Almanac-Pharos Books, 1990. Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the United States, Bowers & Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Vermeule, Cornelius, Numismatic Art in America, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1971. White, Weimar W. The Liberty Seated Dollar 1840-1873, New York, Sanford J. Durst, 1985.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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Draped Bust - Heraldic Eagle Silver Dollars 1798-1804

Throughout the 1790s heads repeated to cylinder off the guillotines of France as that country struggled to insist the democratic principles it had first espoused in 1789. Some Americans watched nervously from across the Atlantic and wondered if the violence of the mob would division to this country. Nevertheless America's democratic principles were tightly established, as it had already undergone the subject pain of revolution, war and two changes of government since 1776. By 1798 democracy in America start to come of age.

This adulthood of the United States was evident in the belated 1790s not only by America's refusal to be pulled into the war between England and France; it can also be seen in the changes in the people's corps of currency, the buck. The intention modifications of 1798 were actually stranded in events that began three being before. When a new and improved coin plead inwards at the Mint in Philadelphia in the mechanism of 1795, it made improvements doable both in the mass of coins formed as well as their worth. The new squash was able to right stamp out the large sized buck coins and enter all the object niceties in the dead invention.

The Draped Bust prominent actor intended money obverse Gilbert Stuart in an effort to elate U.S. change designs to "world brand" eminence. This purpose distinct a growing of the "immature" Liberty of the preceding Flowing Hair plan to a more "matronly" idea of the emblematic national emblem. In 1798 the childish hatchling eagle seen on the hitch of the past cash was replaced with an elder and more naturalistic eagle, one that was more in trust with heraldic iconography. One control in the iconography of the Heraldic Eagle overturn, though, was in the position of the arrows in the eagle's right scrape-the more moral residency in heraldry-leaving the lime stem in the left or fewer moral claw. This more military placement of the arrows was frequent on all heraldic eagle coins of the epoch.

During the six existence that Draped Bust Heraldic Eagle dollars were struck 1,153,709 coins were formed, all in the Philadelphia mint. There are dozens of die varieties, most involving only a jiffy difference in the placement of the stars, numerals, lettering or other construct rudiments.

Nevertheless there are some important shape changes in the sequence that are of gain to an expansive reach of collectors. On 1798 dollars there are two different patterns of stars on the back above the eagle's beginning. The former configuration, known as the "intersect archetype" was a modification of The Great Seal of the United States, with the stars arranged in two triangular groups of six tied by a specific star in the inside. The later mean was much simpler. Knowing as the "arc example," it had two analogy rows of stars: the top row had six, the flash row five stars, followed by one star on moreover piece of the eagle's cranium. No one knows precisely why the star patterns were tainted, but the past "cross pattern" configuration is commonly the scarcer of the two.

An interesting flounder occurred in the converse stars in 1799. An effective die was twisted that had 15 stars, somewhat than the vital 13. The mistake was discovered before any coins were struck, and somewhat than discard the die, the clouds were enlarged over the offending stars, cover all but the tips of the luxury star points. In 1800 a die was cut that had a luxury letter An at the end of AMERICA. The luxury lettered was polished away, but only the right portion of the letter was effaced, leaving what appears to be a letter I, hence creating the well-known AMERICAI range.

One of the most famed coins ever struck is considered a part of the Draped Bust chain-the 1804 dough. While the Mint struck dollars in 1804, all were created from leftover dies square 1802 and 1803, and no dollars were struck with the meeting 1804. However, thirty existence later when some presentation sets of U.S. coins were needed for diplomatic gifts, the Draped Bust drawing was resurrected and square 1804, as that was the last year the cash coin had been struck. These were the so-called "creative" or Class I 1804 dollars. The Class II and Class III 1804 "restrikes" were fashioned in the tardy 1850s for prominent collectors of the day. Only 15 specimens are known of all three types.

No dutiful proofs are known from this string but, as with the 1804 money, Mint officials were only too thrilled to oblige collectors in later existence. Sometime between 1836 and the dead 1850s recent looking resilient dollars appeared with the dates 1801, 1802 and 1803. These fantasy pieces are kindly valued by collectors.

Grading Draped Bust dollars can be a challenge. Certain die varieties are forever weak on the stars above the eagle's head because of die crash. Other varieties will show occasional areas of weakness due to die breakage. In high grades, signs of friction begin to show on the premier points of the locks above the brow and along the shoulder and bust line of Liberty. On the transpose, show first shows on the clouds, then the eagle's breast fluff. On dimly or irregularly struck coins, these intention facts may not be copious brought up. Counterfeits are known, and several justly illusory pieces dated 1799 surfaced in the early 1980s. These coins all have universal characteristics and parade dull, comatose surfaces. Authentication of any questionable Draped Bust dollar is amply recommended.

In decrease grades Draped Bust dollars are generally serene by die form specialists. Coins in XF and better situation are commonly required out by those who gather by date and major category. For mode purposes, most collectors want a lone, high grade, snag-liberated example of a common, well produced form. Such coins are totally obscure nowadays and usually pass a substantial premium when untaken.

After 1800 silver dollars began to recede from circulation. Many U.S. dollars were shipped overseas or melted for their high intrinsic value. Dollar production clogged all together in 1804, and the next generation did not have a current circulating dollar coin pending a direct artistic renaissance came to the Mint in 1836, led by Christian Gobrecht. Over the two centuries since their manufacture, the fleeting-lived string of Draped Bust dollars has continued to be one of the most widely collected in U.S. money.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 39 to 40 millimeters Weight: 26.96 grams Composition: .8924 silver.1076 copper Edge: Lettered Net Weight: .77344 little natural silver

BIBLIOGRAPHY: American Numismatic Society, America's Silver Coinage, 1794-1891, American Numismatic Society, New York, 1987. Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Highfill, John W. The Comprehensive U.S. Silver Dollar Encyclopedia, Highfill Press, Inc., Broken Arrow, OK, 1992. Hilt, Robert P. Die Varieties of Early United States Coins, RTS Publishing Company, Omaha, NE, 1980. Reiver, Jules, The United States Early Silver Dollars 1794 to 1804, Krause Publications, Iola, WI, 1998.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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Eisenhower Dollar 1973 Proof

When the Treasury Department prepare a halt to the paying out of silver dollars in March of 1964, it looked like the closing interval had been written for these historic coins. Surprisingly, Congress voted that same year to coin 45 million additional silver dollars. Coming in the midst of a spartan nationwide coin lack, this seemingly frivolous employment of the Mint's machinery and person power was ended after just 316,076 pieces had been struck, and these coins were never issued. The Coinage Acted of July 23, 1965 included a provision that no rank silver dollars were to be coined for a period of five being. The situation could then be re-evaluated at that time.

As the end of Congress' five-year ban on silver dollars approached, the idea was conceived for a circulating buck coin to credit war hero and two-tenure President Dwight David Eisenhower, who had freshly died. With silver long left from the citizens's dimes and quarters, and with ongoing dispute over its discontinuance in the half cash, there was never any profound consideration of with the precious metal in circulation strikes of the new Eisenhower money. There were those, however, who argued for a silver collectors' style to be sold at a premium over face treasure.

Congressman Bob Casey of Texas introduced a charge into the House on October 29, 1969 work for a circulating commemorative money to reverence both Eisenhower and the Apollo XI liberty flight, mankind's first hall on the moon. More than a year of next wrangling was to track before this statement was lastly official in a modified form. Along the way, the U.S. Mint prepared an alternative reversal propose featuring a heraldic eagle that looked, in the terms of imminent numismatic writer Q. David Bowers, like something one would find on a Mint prototype of the 1870s. Reportedly, one of the two proposed reversal designs (doubtless the Apollo XI image, given its implications for the world's coming) originally featured an eagle whose expression the U.S. State Department feared other nations would translate as hostile. Whether the eagle which ultimately did grow on the coin's reorder is a "open" bird is testing to establish from its neutral expression.

Becoming law on December 31, 1970, the schedule that shaped the Eisenhower cash providing for a circulating coin made from the copper-nickel sandwich or "dressed" composition then being worn for dimes and quarters (and for half dollars start in 1971). It also tolerable the coining of up to 150 million silver-clothed coins for retailing to collectors. These would be coined in the same composition lately worn for halves square 1965-70, two outer layers that were 80% silver and 20% copper bonded to an inside extract that was about 21% silver and 79% copper. This bent a whole mix that was 40% silver, with the equalize being copper. A controversial amendment to this document if a portion of the profits from the vending of these antenna coins would be donated to Eisenhower College, a reserved institution in Seneca Falls, New York which ultimately folded though receiving some $9 million dollars from this spring.

As Mint Director Mary Brooks wanted the coins bent rapidly, there was no time for a shared propose competition. Chief Engraver Franked Gasparro was directed to arrange the models in as little time as vital. Expecting this currency, Gasparro had already begun work; his galvano for the facade bore the year 1970, even though the first Ike dollars were square 1971. His devise portrays on the obverse a bare-headed, left-facing profile bust of the recent leader. Arranging in an arc above him is the legend LIBERTY, while the motto IN GOD WE TRUST appears in two outline below Eisenhower's cheek. The date is at base, with the mintmark (if any) above it and to the right. Gasparro's initials FG are on the truncation of the bust. The problem depicts the American eagle, a lime diverge of stillness in its talons, descending onto the moon. The hazy Earth is in the handle above and to the left. The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is centered above the eagle, and the legend UNITED STATES OF AMERICA is given in an arc around the high fringe. The price ONE DOLLAR is superimposed on the moon's surface along the lessen border. An arc of small stars surrounds the eagle, Earth and the motto. The initials FG occur below the eagle's tail.

Why the coins were not ready to be issued until November 1, 1971 isn't certain, although it was supposed the abundant tribunal strikes were abandoned because of goal deficiencies. Collectors snapped up a good portion of the dollars free that day and for some months afterward. Still, enough were coined that they ultimately reached the channels of buying. It was only then that the fundamental flaw in Congressional belief was naked: the American open minimally had no desire to use these large and gloomy coins. True, betting casinos welcomed the revenue of truthful cash coins to succeed the cash-sized tokens that had been used since 1965, but even the casinos ultimately hackneyed of these coins. Too often, customers took them home as souvenirs, since they were seldom seen elsewhere and people imagined them to be underdone.

With a dropoff in ultimatum for new Ike dollars, the Mint opted to register only enough of the 1973 magazine to discharge tips for uncirculated coin sets from collectors. This left a net mintage of excluding than 2 million each for the Philadelphia and Denver Mints. From the outset, San Francisco had coined only the unusual aerial coins: the uncirculated copy of the silver-dressed composition (known from it's packaging as the "desolate Ike") and the evidence form of the same coin (known as the "coffee Ike"). Beginning in 1973, it also coined an evidence edition of the copper-nickel coin for inclusion in the expected resistant set.

The residents's impending Bicentennial resulted in a competition for commemorative designs to mercy the reverses of the section, half and dough, respectively. The pleasing point for the buck's undo was submitted by Dennis R. Williams, whose clever theory of the Liberty Bell superimposed on the moon provided a connect between previous and offering (his initials DRW are found to the right of the signal's clapper). The steady buck coinage square 1974 sustained until the middle of 1975, when production of the new Bicentennial designs dated 1776-1976 began. This left no dollar coins dated 1975. The Bicentennial pieces were first released in the plummet of 1975, and their mintage lasting through the following year. Silver-clothed coins were made at San Francisco, besides the circulating version coined at Philadelphia and Denver. The even motif returned in 1977 and 1978, when the Eisenhower series was ended in benefit of the ill-meant Susan B. Anthony "baby dollar." For these two years, however, no Ikes were coined in silver.

There are no bloody dates within the reliable coinage of Eisenhower dollars, although several issues, particularly 1971 and 1972 dollars from the Philadelphia Mint, were poorly made and are stubborn to locate array. Several teenager varieties resulted from refinements to the hubs during the first few years. The Bicentennial coins subsist with both the Variety 1 reverse (broad script) or the Variety 2 (narrow lettering). A small mass of silver-clothed dollars were made at the Denver Mint in mistake and may be found dated 1974-D, 1976-D or 1977-D. Proofs of the Bicentennial dollar were coined in 1974 at the Philadelphia Mint lacking a mintmark, but none are known to survive. A song silvered-dressed resilient of the jiffy category has been documented lacking a mintmark, its place of source strange.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 24.59 grams (silver-clad) Composition: .800 silver.200 copper bonded to .209 silver.791 copper Net Weight: .3161 ounce complete silver Weight: 22.68 grams (CuNi-clad) Composition: .750 copper.250 nickel bonded to downright copper Edge: Reeded

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Wiles, James, Ph.D, CONECA Attribution Guide to Eisenhower Dollar Varieties, CONECA, Fort Worth, TX, 1997. Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 48th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1994.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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1904 Morgan Dollar, Brilliant Uncirculated

Political bulldoze, not civic petition, brought the Morgan cash into being. There was no unfeigned must for a new silver buck in the deceased 1870s; the last before "flip," the Liberty Seated dough, had been legislated out of reality in 1873, and barely anyone missed it.

Silver-mining happiness did neglect the buck, still, and lobbied Congress forcefully for its benefit. The Comstock Lode in Nevada was yielding giant quantities of silver, with ore appraise $36 million being extracted annually. After some futile attempts, the silver forces in Congress-led by Representative Richard ("Silver Dick") Bland of Missouri-finally disarmed authorization for a new silver money when Congress approved the Bland-Allison Act on February 28, 1878. This Acted essential the Treasury to obtain at market levels between two million and four million dollars of silver gold every month to be coined into dollars. This amounted to a small subsidy, arrival when the money's face penalty exceeded its intrinsic regard by only 0.07%.

In November 1877, virtually four months before passage of the Bland-Allison Act, the Treasury saw the handwriting on the roadblock and began making preparations for a new cash coin. Mint Director Henry P. Linderman designed Chief Engraver William Barber and one of his assistants, George T. Morgan, to make prototype dollars, with the best originate to be worn on the new coin. Actually, Linderman permanent this "contest" in Morgan's help; he had been dissatisfied with the work of the two Barbers-William and his son, Charles-and in 1876 had hired Morgan, a talented British engraver, with tactics to delegate him with new coin designs. At that time, resumption of silver dough penny was not yet planned, and Morgan began work on designs planned for the half money. Following Linderman's orders that a move of Liberty should return the thorough-notable depiction then in use, Morgan recruited Philadelphia drill coach Anna Willess Williams to pose for the new point.

Morgan's face features a left-facing portrait of Miss Liberty. The hitch depicts a rather skinny eagle which led some to vilify the coin as a "buzzard buck." The designer's early M appears on both sides-a first. It's on the truncation of Liberty's spit and on the ribbon's left round on the overturn. Mintmarks (O, S, D, and CC) are found below the circlet on the change. Points to confirm for carry on Morgans are the tresses above Liberty's eye and ear, the high upper fold of her cap and the crown of the eagle's breast.

Soon after production began, somebody advised the Mint that the eagle should have seven tail down, instead of the eight being exposed, and Linderman prepared this change. As an outcome, some 1878 Morgan dollars have eight feathers, some seven-and some show seven over eight. The seven-over-eight class is the scarcest, though all are somewhat customary.

More than half a billion Morgan dollars were struck from 1878 through 1904, with production taking place at the chief mint in Philadelphia and the branches in New Orleans, San Francisco and Carson City. Carson City production was normally much minor and defunct all together after that outlet was bunged in 1893. The coin came back for one closing curtain call in 1921, when more than 86 million examples were bent under the language of the Pittman Act at Philadelphia, San Francisco and Denver-but that was a bend-edged sword: Under the 1918 legislation, more than 270 million adult silver dollars, almost all Morgans, had been melted. The law necessary replacements for these, but most were of the Peace shape, which replaced the Morgan edition at the end of 1921.

In all, some 657 million Morgan dollars were formed in 96 different year-and-mint combinations. Hundreds of millions were melted over the time-by the government under the Pittman Act and the Silver Act of 1942, and by exclusive refiners since the delayed 1960s, when rising silver prices made this profitable. Despite all the melting, Americans had more than enough Morgans to pervade their daily wishes, since the dollars circulated often only in the West. As an outcome, colossal stockpiles remained in the Treasury's vaults, as well as reserve vaults nationwide. This explains why, so many Morgan dollars are so well preserved nowadays although their age; few saw actual use.

Even as the numismatic hobby underwent express lump beginning in the 1930s, hobby in other collecting areas far outpaced the mind paid to the large Morgan cartwheels. Most collectors favored the slash face-value coins (with their lower price) that were gladly available in circulation. Although it was viable to order silver dollars through banks or quickly from the Treasury, few noticed or cared. In the behind 1930s, however, some Washington dealers scholarly that the Treasury Department's Cash Room near the White House was paying out uncirculated Carson City money-coins having a market value of $5 or more at the time! More than a few dealers calmly exploited this discovery throughout the 1940s and '50s.

In the early 1960s, with silver rising in price, opportunists recognized the occasion to rotation securely profits by abiding silver certificates for money coins-mostly Morgans-at the Treasury. By the time the government clogged this rewarding glass in 1964, only 2.9 million cartwheels were left in its vaults, almost all of the scarce Carson City Morgans. The General isolated these Services Administration in a sequence of letters-bid sales from 1972 through 1980, earning big profits for the government and triggering great new notice in silver dollars.

Interest in Morgans was auxiliary heightened by the promotion surrounding the 400,000+ dollars found in the basement of Nevada eccentric LaVere Redfield's home. After word leaked out of the amazing store, some dealers got into the act, each jockeying for take in a crawl that ultimately wrecked with a Probate Court mart detained in January of 1976. At that auction, A-Mark Coins of Los Angeles captured the pile with a disarming bid of $7.3 million. The coins were cooperatively marketed by several dealers over a cycle of some days. Rather than depressing prices, the orderly spreading of these coins only fetched more collectors into the Morgan dollar fold. Similarly, the early 1980s witnessed the uniformly successful distribution of the 1.5 million silver dollars in the Continental Bank collect.

The Morgan dollar's scoop is a Cinderella tale: Until the 1960s, it was mostly unnoticed by the civic. Since then, it has gradually become among the most broadly pursued and preferred of all U. S. Coins. Although many collectors find the challenge of assembling an extreme court and mintmark set in Mint State compelling, others gratify themselves with collecting just one coin per year. Exceptional specimens are also wanted after by typeface collectors.

Major keys contain 1895, 1893-S, 1895-O, 1892-S, 1889-CC, 1884-S and 1879-CC. Mint minutes show that 12,000 dealing-smack dollars were made in Philadelphia in 1895, but only proofs are known; the mintage of these is 880. Proofs were made for every year in the series, but only a few brilliant proofs-variously reported at 15 to 24-are known for 1921. Prooflike Morgans also are well valued and are composed in both Prooflike (PL) and Deep-Mirror Prooflike (DPL or DMPL).

Few coins in U.S. account have been greeted with more indifference at the time of their release than this silver dollar. And few, if any, have then departed onto stimulate such passionate excitement among collectors.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition: .900 silver.100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .77344 ounce downright silver

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States. A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Fey, Dr. Michael S. And Oxman, Jeff, The Top 100 Morgan Dollar Varieties: The VAM Keys, RCI Publishing, Morris Plains, NJ, 1996. Miller, Wayne, The Morgan and Peace Dollar Textbook, Adam Smith Pub. Co., Metairie, LA, 1982. Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing Co. Inc., New York, 1966. Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993. Van Allen, Leroy C. & Mallis, A. George, Comprehensive Catalog and Encyclopedia of Morgan & Peace Dollars, 3rd Edition, DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA 1991.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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Coin Collecting on a shoe-series finances

Probably everyone at one time or another has calm coins. Some people conserve old wheat pennies they find in change and hurl them in a jar. Other people amass position quarters, and some others amass certain coins like nickles or dimes, and try to develop an exact collection over time. A lot of people think coin collecting is the hobby of queen's and truthfully, it's regularly called that. An emperor may be able to build a giant collection of coins, but I pledge you, that the small collection a little boy has that may only be amount a team of dollars, appeal just as much to that boy as a King's coins mean to him.

I can tell you right now, everyone can save coins and you don't have to be creamy. In actuality I have sweet a large coin collection, and I have had a very low paying job all my life. There are a lot of behavior superstar can create a great coin collection over time, while still paying the bills.

Coins are so neat looking, I memorize when I was an offspring boy, my grandad would go upstairs and open a protected we had, inside was a metal drawer containing some old Morgan and Peace Silver Dollars. My grandad would let me sit and play with the coins regularly. I would storage one by the brink on the enter top and flip it on the side with my identify and the coin would spin wildly around on the submit like a toy top. The coins were freezing silver or ashen colored and were superb to look at, they were large and grave, not like the little coin we have today. I often wondered how many persons actually accepted these things around in their pockets everyday, it only took a few of them to weigh extremely a lot.

After my grandad accepted away back in 1969, my dad sold the old silver dollars, I don't think he certainly hunted to, but my grandad had left the family ranch pretty absorbed indebt, so dad had a mart and sold about everything excepting our house and the shed, to pay off the mammoth bills. It wasn't too long after that when dad got bitten by the coin collecting bug. At first it coins but paper money that got dad ongoing. I memorize dad saw an ad in the back of some magazine, where a guy was offering to pay $2 for the money fees you sent him that had a certain treasurer's name on it, that name was: " Joesph W. Barr ." My dad looked in his wallet at some buck bills he had, and loyal enough he had one that had the signature " Joesph W. Barr " on it. Dad took the money from his wallet and kept it in an envelop in his old revolve top counter, and after scrutiny his money for numerous time afterwards, dad found some more of them. Sometime later dad mailed the money bills to the address in the magazine ad, and steady enough he rapidly got a verify for the dollars benefit a very dough each. Dad repeated sharp and transfer in them " Joesph W. Barr " dough bills for a while, then after an episode of time, the guy no longer was accepting them.

Dad then happening industry a few Indian precede cents and some bully nickels. Then as he got older and money seemed to get a lot more tighter, dad abandon business coins and turned to a new hobby, doing sweepstakes. Nevertheless by this time, I was hooked, I just loved the look of the old coins, the silver ones and the old copper large cents, they just seemed so neat compared to the boring coins of everyday use. Now, as I am text this editorial, I stumbled across an interesting expose about the " Joesph W. Barr " cash bills from the 'American Numismatic Association' it said, the following: "At one time, it was speculated that the remarks signed by Treasurer Joseph W. Barr would eventually control a high numismatic quantity since he was in workforce for only 23 days in 1968-69. However, during that period, an entire of 484 million notes were formed with his signature. The high quantity formed dictates that the notes will never be considered scarce in our duration. Interestingly, in 1995, numismatic dramatist Alan Herbert avowed, "A $1 Barr document deposited in a notice-course account in 1969 would have been merit over $4.00, figuring 6% appeal compounded annually. A circulated Barr hint kept in an anodyne-deposit box for 26 being value $1 today."

So that explains why that guy perhaps abandon business the " Joesph W. Barr " dollar bills, it seemed they might of been collectible for a little while, but they just never trapped on. Today you can still buy them on eBay and other spaces, sometimes for slightly more than $1.00. Oh well, it is something that has mystified in my wits every since I was a little boy, I will forever memorize dad checking his wallet for " Joesph W. Barr " dollar bills. Now, as I wipe the tears from my eyes, yes I am sad to say dad has been vanished a the being now, and I still overlook him very much, especially when I sit here only and think about the time we spent together in the living departed by, oh well, at least it's forever great memories when it comes to you, dad.

Now, as I regain my mental composure, if I ever had one, I want to say that I never forlorn the longing to save coins. And as I got old enough to work plump time, and live on my own I started and built a quite large coin collection. I didn't have much money as I never went to train or trade school, and I have forever had a job effective as a drudge, so I had to gauzy habits that I could create up my coin collection cheaply.

One day, I was looking in the back of a Coin collecting magazine that I had purchased at an area reports abide, and I found an ad where you could connect a coin collecting penalize ceremony. They would propel you certain coins once a month, and you could choose the ones you wanted to buy and keep, and if you didn't want them all, just transmit the others back to them, and the next month they would remit some other coins for you to assess. What made this plan better than the other esteem military I had often seen was, you could tell them what type of coins you were interested in, and what estimate you were disposed to waste monthly. I elected miscellaneous U.S. coins, everything from old large cents from the 1800's to silver mercury dimes and bewilder nickels etc. And I chose only to spend $20 a month, for me this was perfect and for about a year or more I stayed in the course and over time I got a finicky bunch of coins from them, then something happened and the guests folded or went out of business, as I never received any more coins from them and I no longer saw their ad in the magazines.

Overtime I discovered other shoddy methods to aquire some good coins, one of the methods I still use, is something that everybody can do to edge building a fussy coin collection. Just gain incisive and probing your pinch change, I still find wheat pennies and silver war nickels, and many pre 1960 nickels, and sometimes a silver coin in concise change. One time about two time back, I was at a community deposit and got some change back, I noticed two of the quarters I received looked kinda colorless in flush, examining them compactly after I got back home, I discovered they were both pre 1964 silver Washington quarters. I figured somebody must of needed money to buy some cigarettes or milk or something, and must of worn some of their old coins, I was just fluky enough to had been there at the right time and place to get them in my change.

One place to find a lot of finicky coins is to go to different banks and buy rolls, explore through them tenderly, and you will be staggered of the neat finds you may come across, boon just add a few out of your compact change to supplant the ones you want to keep from the rolls, and you can excursion them back into a different rank for some different rolls of coins to pursuit through.

Another place that is honestly good for discovery some atypical coins is at home mite markets, be wise while as many of the people at these spaces are very sentient of the coins value, and they often ask for much more then what the coins mean. Read up on the coins you are interested in buying, or better yet, take along a sack coin price funnel with you when you go to buy coining, it's better to be sparing then foolish.

Anyway, now after collecting coins for fun over the time, I have almost every Lincoln cent that was made from 1909 up to exhibit, and I have every Jefferson nickel from the first one that was made in 1938 to nearby, and I have a good sized timber chest filled of miscellaneous U.S. coins, including silver dollars, mercury dimes, buffalo nickels, Large Cents and many more matchless and unusual coins. I figure the coins will make a nice gift soon, something to avoid to my daughter and her children, and possibly I can trigger that fire in them, that my dad started in me, the joy of coin collecting. So father checking your sack change today, you just never know what rare finds you may come across.

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