A significant upgrade for my gold type set.


My most important find at the recent Summer FUN show was this 1873 double eagle. As a type this is a very difficult coin to find in strict Mint State, and this is the first example that I have seen since I have been looking that pleased me. It is an MS-63. Previously I had had an AU-58 in this slot. Going any further up the grading scale gets to be well up into the five figures. The 1873 double eagle with the "open 3" is the most commonly seen issue in Mint State, but this coin is still scarce.
In 1864 the motto, “In God we trust,” was introduced on the Two Cent piece. In 1866 Congress and the U.S. mint officials decided to add the motto to the designs of any coins that were large enough to accommodate it. For the double eagle the oval formed by 13 stars above the eagle’s head on the reverse was slightly widened to provide enough space for the additional words. A small number of 1866-S double eagles did not have the motto, but all of the Philadelphia pieces and most of the San Francisco coins included it. The so-called Type II double eagle design would appear until 1877 when the denomination, “Twenty D.” would be spelled out completely as “Twenty Dollars.”
The Type II double eagles are not particularly rare in the circulated grades up to and including Choice AU, but strictly Mint State pieces are very scarce to rare. The reason for this was that very few collectors during the 19th century could afford to set aside coins that represented more than two week’s income for most American families. On the other hand, very few citizens carried and used these coins on a regular basis. They were used for reserve balances in bank vaults or passed from one business to another to complete large cash transactions. Therefore many of the surviving pieces are in EF or AU condition.
Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
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Edit: PM me if you need to sell your AU-58. I am up for BJ's sloppy seconds.
<< <i>Nice coin!
Edit: PM me if you need to sell your AU-58. I am up for BJ's sloppy seconds.
We are talking coins here right.
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<< <i>for comparison I'd like to see the AU also if available >>
This is a very nice AU-58. I bought it raw as such many years ago.