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Time to change your mind on modern Morgan and Peace classification?

Now that the mint has continued making Morgan and Peace dollars available this year, showing that the series has continued, and will likely be here for awhile, is it time to view them as new “types” and not “commemoratives” or “modern issues?” To me the Morgans are a Type 3 and the Peace are type 3.

Let me make my case, so many of our 20th century plus coins were originally issued to commemorate something: a death, a reverence, etc… in this case it’s an anniversary.
By and large the new issues are exceptionally similar. Yes, there’s been some tweaks, but we’ve seen that time and time again on other coin series.

Now I know, many will say, but they aren’t issued for circulation! I get that. But, folks do you really expect a silver coin to be released for circulation ever again? Of course not. This release method from the mint is the only way it’s going to happen. The traditionalists will say the break was too long, they’re too perfect, made with different methods. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If you LOVE Morgans and Peace dollars you should be overjoyed to expand your collection and see them live on.

Unless you have a time machine how could you ever expect to hold one of these beauties so immaculately crafted. Even then you’re not likely getting perfection. And don’t get me started on the chances of owning a perfect deep cam proof. I’m not a multimillionaire. Well, maybe after tonight’s Powerball….

Having fun while switching things up and focusing on a next level PCGS slabbed 1950+ type set, while still looking for great examples for the 7070.

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Comments

  • messydeskmessydesk Posts: 20,057 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Modern commems. They were started by commemorating the old series and they're going to keep doing that until the well runs dry.

  • PeakRaritiesPeakRarities Posts: 4,042 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I’m with neophyte, imo anything that comes in either MS69 or 70 can’t ever really be considered a “coin”. They share more similarities with ASEs than they do with their classic predecessors.

    Founder- Peak Rarities
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  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 35,103 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 7, 2023 12:49PM

    If you want to consider them part of the series, you may. If you don't want to even consider them US coins, you also may. Every collector can decide what belongs in their collection. It is similar to the 1895 Morgan.

  • Project NumismaticsProject Numismatics Posts: 1,591 ✭✭✭✭✭

    It doesn’t really matter to me what anyone calls them. I am really enjoying them, particularly the proofs. Coin, or not, bullion or not, overpriced or not, I like them.

  • NeophyteNumismatistNeophyteNumismatist Posts: 1,077 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I am not saying that it's collectible bullion in a negative way. The legislation did not pass to make this a commemorative, and it is not a coin. It is .999 fine - it's bullion. Pretty design? Yes. Collectible? For sure! Call it what you want, but it's bullion by every measure.

    I am a newer collector (started April 2020), and I primarily focus on U.S. Half Cents and Type Coins. Early copper is my favorite.

  • TurtleCatTurtleCat Posts: 4,619 ✭✭✭✭✭

    For me, no, it's not a part of the classic series. It is its own series and should be its own series. Sure, a registry set could be put together to include them. No problem there as far as I'm concerned. But it's still, to me, not part of the classic sets even if many of the old Morgan and Peace dollars weren't made to circulate and were just government sponsored bullion stores to make special interests happy.

  • Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 8,391 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 7, 2023 1:19PM

    I see them as a continuation of the series.

    Ones have purchased have moved quickly for me - shows /online. Like them, super Investment buys. Don’t care what other players may call them.

    Would like see them do something like that with Early 20th Century gold. More people would be able afford them / nice.

    Coins & Currency
  • The_Dinosaur_ManThe_Dinosaur_Man Posts: 997 ✭✭✭✭✭

    They don't come in 1000 coin bags, therefore they are not true Morgan and Peace Dollars. They are a modern commemorative series, similar to the classic half dollar series of 1892-1954 that had designs issued for multiple years, from multiple mints, and in multiple finishes.

    If the Mint does continue making them long enough, they will be deserving of a dedicated book or album.

    Custom album maker and numismatic photographer.
    Need a personalized album made? Design it on the website below and I'll build it for you.
    https://www.donahuenumismatics.com/.

  • CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 32,353 ✭✭✭✭✭

    What are the First Lady coins in gold, and the 2016 Dime, Quarter and Half?
    I personally would not mind seeing an NCLT section in the back of the Redbook.

    Numismatist. 50 year member ANA. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Winner numerous NLG Literary Awards.
  • BStrauss3BStrauss3 Posts: 3,510 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:
    They are collectible bullion. They are not commemoratives, nor coins. They have no relation to the old series outside their design similarities. I would also beware in buying modern "perfection", as the "perfect" coin can develop milk spots and other unsightly features over time.

    Technically, they are not commemoratives, they are

    $1 coins in recognition of the 100th anniversary of completion of coinage of the Morgan dollar and the 100th anniversary of commencement of coinage of the Peace dollar" (per the law enabling them

    https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/6192 )

    BUT, they are legal tender US Coins, just like your ASE.

    And its a little more than "design similarities", again quoting the legislation

    shall have an obverse design and a reverse design that are renditions of the designs historically used on the obverse and reverse

    -----Burton
    ANA 50 year/Life Member (now "Emeritus")
  • goldengolden Posts: 9,793 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Just junk.

  • 124Spider124Spider Posts: 965 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Collectible bullion.

    I like them, so I buy them. They're not expensive (compared, say to an 1893-CC "real" Morgan dollar), and they're pretty.

    But don't consider them part of the original series (both of which I also collect).

    JMO

  • ExtremeengineerExtremeengineer Posts: 138 ✭✭✭
    edited October 8, 2023 6:41PM

    @Project Numismatics said:
    It doesn’t really matter to me what anyone calls them. I am really enjoying them, particularly the proofs. Coin, or not, bullion or not, overpriced or not, I like them.

    Agreed. The vitriol just seems wholly unnecessary. There are coins, medals, and medallions, both old and new, that I don’t really enjoy, and don’t see myself ever collecting. But it would be extremely hypocritical to judge those pieces, or those who collect them, so I don’t. I enjoy old coins, I enjoy new coins, I enjoy coin shaped pieces of metal that may not even be coins. Who cares? Coming to these threads just to say something someone else likes, or collects, is junk is detrimental to the hobby.

  • alefzeroalefzero Posts: 993 ✭✭✭✭✭

    While one could argue that the original Morgans were essentially bullion and Peace dollars commemoratives, they still had $1 purchasing power in the market. These clearly do not fit into the idea that a coin is designed for commerce. So they are what we know deep down they are - modern commemoratives, which differ from classics not just in date but in release value.

  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,444 ✭✭✭✭✭

    They're worth about twenty five bucks , to me.

  • Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 8,391 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 9, 2023 11:50AM

    Just don’t not see them as mod Commems. Continuation of the series more accurate classification for them.

    They are a super investment buy. Sell well for me at shows. More investors can afford them. As the series continues who knows we may have some more key dates…

    Coins & Currency
  • MFeldMFeld Posts: 13,883 ✭✭✭✭✭

    No, it's not time for me to change my mind.

    Mark Feld* of Heritage Auctions*Unless otherwise noted, my posts here represent my personal opinions.

  • ashelandasheland Posts: 23,335 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Regardless of how they are classified, I like them. 👍
    They’re just fun.

  • VasantiVasanti Posts: 458 ✭✭✭✭

    The fact that they aren’t the same weight and silver content puts them in the collectible bullion category.

  • morgandollar1878morgandollar1878 Posts: 4,006 ✭✭✭✭✭

    To me they are a commemorative and will never be anything more.

    Instagram: nomad_numismatics
  • maymay Posts: 1,590 ✭✭✭✭✭

    They should have stopped at 2021 and called it a commemorative.

    Type collector, mainly into Seated. -formerly Ownerofawheatiehorde. Good BST transactions with: mirabela, OKCC, MICHAELDIXON, Gerard

  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 35,103 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @MFeld said:
    No, it's not time for me to change my mind.

    Does anyone ever....?

  • messydeskmessydesk Posts: 20,057 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Vasanti said:
    The fact that they aren’t the same weight and silver content puts them in the collectible bullion category.

    All silver commems have been .999 fineness for a few years because of the cost and convenience of sourcing planchets and they're still commems.

  • olympicsosolympicsos Posts: 825 ✭✭✭✭

    @The_Dinosaur_Man said:
    They don't come in 1000 coin bags, therefore they are not true Morgan and Peace Dollars. They are a modern commemorative series, similar to the classic half dollar series of 1892-1954 that had designs issued for multiple years, from multiple mints, and in multiple finishes.

    If the Mint does continue making them long enough, they will be deserving of a dedicated book or album.

    Proof Morgan Dollars made from 1878-1904 didn't come in 1000 coin bags either.

  • Some_of_itSome_of_it Posts: 136 ✭✭✭

    Commemorative bullion coinage

  • BStrauss3BStrauss3 Posts: 3,510 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Ownerofawheatiehorde said:
    They should have stopped at 2021 and called it a commemorative.

    They couldn't by law - the two commemorative programs for 2021 had already been scheduled.

    -----Burton
    ANA 50 year/Life Member (now "Emeritus")
  • NewEnglandRaritiesNewEnglandRarities Posts: 1,137 ✭✭✭✭

    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I). The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit. We need to identify these “terms”

    New England Rarities...Dealer In Colonial Coinage and Americana
  • NeophyteNumismatistNeophyteNumismatist Posts: 1,077 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NewEnglandRarities said:
    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I). The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit. We need to identify these “terms”

    I am so confused by this post, and I have read it twice. Can you explain what you mean by, "If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits." Are you saying that if the US Mint made these Morgan/Peace Dollars for circulation, they are counterfeit? Thanks for the clarification, because I must be mixed up here.

    I am a newer collector (started April 2020), and I primarily focus on U.S. Half Cents and Type Coins. Early copper is my favorite.

  • burfle23burfle23 Posts: 2,431 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 10, 2023 3:27PM

    Not sure why I was tagged into this odd post B) ...

    I am certainly not changing my mind on these things as a result; I'll let you know when I spot a Chinese knock-off of one though.

  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 35,103 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NewEnglandRarities said:
    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I). The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit. We need to identify these “terms”

    Would you say the same about a proof large cent?

  • TorinoCobra71TorinoCobra71 Posts: 8,054 ✭✭✭

    @messydesk said:
    Modern commems. They were started by commemorating the old series and they're going to keep doing that until the well runs dry.

    Kinda like the Oregon Trail Commem?

    image
  • messydeskmessydesk Posts: 20,057 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @TorinoCobra71 said:

    @messydesk said:
    Modern commems. They were started by commemorating the old series and they're going to keep doing that until the well runs dry.

    Kinda like the Oregon Trail Commem?

    And Texas, Boone, BTW, WC, Arkansas.

  • Cougar1978Cougar1978 Posts: 8,391 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 11, 2023 3:12PM

    Definitely (without a doubt) a continuation of the series.

    The modern dates a super Investment buy (strongly recommend). These are beautiful affordable coins. Sell well from my table at shows. As the series goes on who knows what keys will surface. Neat.

    The Classic New Orleans issues super buy too. Recommend the 1904-O Morgan $ in grades MS64-65. Super Investment buy New Orleans issue. The 1884 CC in MS64 a super Investment buy too. One popular seller for me - The Bayou City Investors Set. A Classic piece from each mint (MS64) plus the mods. A hit with new investors. It gives the series continuous market appeal.

    Coins & Currency
  • BryceMBryceM Posts: 11,817 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Peace dollars are my favorite issue, easily.

    To me, the series ended in 1935 (or perhaps 1964). These modern "coins" are kind of cute, but their composition isn't consistent with circulation, and they clearly weren't intended as instruments of commerce.

    Others probably see it differently. The majority of stuff "made for collectors" doesn't interest me that much. I make an exception for most of the classic commemoratives, but that's about it.

  • OverdateOverdate Posts: 7,052 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:
    The legislation did not pass to make this a commemorative, and it is not a coin.

    It is a coin. It was issued by the U.S. government. It has a face value. It is legal to spend for that face value. Whether it is a commemorative is irrelevant. Whether it was intended for circulation is irrelevant. Many commemoratives (such as Columbian half dollars) that were not intended for circulation were legally spent and remained in circulation for a considerable time. The metallic composition is irrelevant. Many 40% silver Eisenhower dollars were legally spent, even though none were intended for circulation. If modern Morgan/Peace dollars are not coins, what coinage attributes do they lack?

    My Adolph A. Weinman signature :)

  • NeophyteNumismatistNeophyteNumismatist Posts: 1,077 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Overdate said:

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:
    The legislation did not pass to make this a commemorative, and it is not a coin.

    It is a coin. It was issued by the U.S. government. It has a face value. It is legal to spend for that face value. Whether it is a commemorative is irrelevant. Whether it was intended for circulation is irrelevant. Many commemoratives (such as Columbian half dollars) that were not intended for circulation were legally spent and remained in circulation for a considerable time. The metallic composition is irrelevant. Many 40% silver Eisenhower dollars were legally spent, even though none were intended for circulation. If modern Morgan/Peace dollars are not coins, what coinage attributes do they lack?

    By your definition, all US bullion pieces are coins? I guess this is debatable. What is not debatable, is the aspect of this not being a commemorative (we can prove this beyond all doubt). While you say this is irrelevant, I would like to remind you that the question at hand is, "Time to change your mind on modern Morgan and Peace classification?" In order to do this, one must first understand their classification today (and what they are not).

    I honestly don't care enough to continue the debate.

    Question: Time to change your mind on modern Morgan and Peace classification?
    My official answer: NO.

    Goodnight.

    I am a newer collector (started April 2020), and I primarily focus on U.S. Half Cents and Type Coins. Early copper is my favorite.

  • jmlanzafjmlanzaf Posts: 35,103 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:

    @Overdate said:

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:
    The legislation did not pass to make this a commemorative, and it is not a coin.

    It is a coin. It was issued by the U.S. government. It has a face value. It is legal to spend for that face value. Whether it is a commemorative is irrelevant. Whether it was intended for circulation is irrelevant. Many commemoratives (such as Columbian half dollars) that were not intended for circulation were legally spent and remained in circulation for a considerable time. The metallic composition is irrelevant. Many 40% silver Eisenhower dollars were legally spent, even though none were intended for circulation. If modern Morgan/Peace dollars are not coins, what coinage attributes do they lack?

    By your definition, all US bullion pieces are coins? I guess this is debatable. What is not debatable, is the aspect of this not being a commemorative (we can prove this beyond all doubt). While you say this is irrelevant, I would like to remind you that the question at hand is, "Time to change your mind on modern Morgan and Peace classification?" In order to do this, one must first understand their classification today (and what they are not).

    I honestly don't care enough to continue the debate.

    Question: Time to change your mind on modern Morgan and Peace classification?
    My official answer: NO.

    Goodnight.

    It's not really debatable. That's the reason they give them a face value. They are NCLT but they are still "coins".

  • DrDarrylDrDarryl Posts: 618 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 12, 2023 3:14AM

    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/details?prodcode=R44623

    No opinion on my part. However, see page 24 and 25 of the version 20 of the report by the Congressional Research Services: Commemorative Coins: Background, Legislative Process, and Issues for Congress (R44623), as food for thought.

  • BStrauss3BStrauss3 Posts: 3,510 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:

    @NewEnglandRarities said:
    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I). The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit. We need to identify these “terms”

    I am so confused by this post, and I have read it twice. Can you explain what you mean by, "If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits." Are you saying that if the US Mint made these Morgan/Peace Dollars for circulation, they are counterfeit? Thanks for the clarification, because I must be mixed up here.

    Put a paragraph break - they are two separate thoughts:

    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I).

    NEW THOUGHT, related in that Contemporary Circulating Counterfeits are also a collectable item with some question as to how they fit into collecting

    The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit.

    SUMMARY

    We need to identify these “terms”

    -----Burton
    ANA 50 year/Life Member (now "Emeritus")
  • messydeskmessydesk Posts: 20,057 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @DrDarryl said:
    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/details?prodcode=R44623

    No opinion on my part. However, see page 24 and 25 of the version 20 of the report by the Congressional Research Services: Commemorative Coins: Background, Legislative Process, and Issues for Congress (R44623), as food for thought.

    Congress is very good at calling things something other than which they are. "They are solely minted to mark the 100th
    anniversary of the coins," is a way of avoiding the C-word to get around the limit on issuing fund-raising coins. They are de facto commemoratives. Moreover, they're not recognized by the author, owner, or current editor of the VAM book as being part of either series.

  • hfjacintohfjacinto Posts: 878 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 12, 2023 5:37AM

    I don't care what they are, but I like them.


  • OverdateOverdate Posts: 7,052 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @jmlanzaf said:

    @Vasanti said:
    The fact that they aren’t the same weight and silver content puts them in the collectible bullion category.

    Wouldn't be the first time a US coin changed either weight or silver content... do you want arrows at the date?

    Well, the Peace dollars do have rays on the reverse . . .

    My Adolph A. Weinman signature :)

  • burfle23burfle23 Posts: 2,431 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @NeophyteNumismatist said:

    @NewEnglandRarities said:
    All these responses are valuable, but the actual answer is this…are they made for circulation? So these coins being now a\were never or thought to be for actual spending in economy, therefore, hard for some to take them seriously. Love that many collectors enjoy these items (so do I). The collectable CCCs (contemporary circulating counterfeits) are the key to this. @burfle23 I do think this is the answer. If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits. If a coin was made to fool a collector or only had collector value, then not a CCC. A Jefferson large cent otherwise would be the same as a Chinese modern counterfeit. We need to identify these “terms”

    I am so confused by this post, and I have read it twice. Can you explain what you mean by, "If made for circulation/spending then they are true counterfeits." Are you saying that if the US Mint made these Morgan/Peace Dollars for circulation, they are counterfeit? Thanks for the clarification, because I must be mixed up here.

    I read it a couple of times as well...

    The reference is to Contemporary Counterfeits (parallel conversation to a point) and how to define/ characterize them. If the non "official"/ sanctioned mint coin was made to circulate with other coins in commerce, @NewEnglandRarities is stating that would be a true Contemporary (Circulating) Counterfeit; if made specifically to fool collectors it is not a CCC...

  • NewEnglandRaritiesNewEnglandRarities Posts: 1,137 ✭✭✭✭
    edited October 14, 2023 5:37PM

    Wow, I am just checking back into the forum after a couple days. I thought I had edited that post as my iPad was autocorrecting a lot of my words making it a little unreadable, but I must not have posted my edits and corrections. Jack got my point correctly above, was kind of making a semi-parallel point as many have been discussing the correct terms to be used for the many different items out in the market now. Is the item a fantasy, counterfeit, replica, etc?

    In the OP, some comments were made about if these should be “types” and not “commemoratives” etc.

    As this topic has been front and center recently in many groups relating to counterfeits (both Chinese replicas and contemporary circulating counterfeits). Numismatic terms sometimes stick because of what certain items have been historically called. I was intending to say, that these “new” Morgan’s and Peace Dollars, not being produced for commerce/circulation but instead produced for the numismatic collecting world, I think that has to factor in to their actual “term/name”. Chinese replicas/copies also were not made for circulation/spending unlike say Henning nickels. As such, I’m of the belief that many items need to be “rebranded” to a consensus agreement on the definition of terms such as, fantasy, replicas, copies, counterfeits, etc.

    A good point is brought up with coins like a proof Large Cent, which were not produced for circulation. I don’t have a great answer for that, which I think is why the terms used for specific coins needs to be looked at again in todays coin collecting world, so we can have a bit more clarity as all the items are collectable in their own way.

    Sorry for my basically unreadable confusing post above!

    New England Rarities...Dealer In Colonial Coinage and Americana

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