Here's a Game - Guess the Coin...
Business strike only issue. 19th century. Precious metal. This coin had a total mintage of less than 300,000. The survival rate was over 67% with over 95% of survivors in Mint State. What am I?
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, evn when irrefutably accurate.
0
Comments
I have no idea.... I hope I have one though...
Cheers, RickO
Got to be a Morgan Dollar of some sort.
Sounds like a Commem.
A: The year they spend more on their library than their coin collection.
A numismatist is judged more on the content of their library than the content of their cabinet.
1885-CC Morgan Dollar ... Just a guess.
Or maybe the 1881-CC Morgan dollar?
The 2011-S Silver Eagle might also technically qualify.
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

I was going to guess a CC dollar...was going to look up mintage numbers but too lazy frankly.
From the mintage number, the 1881-CC fits very neatly. But from the "95% of survivors" part, I'm not so certain.
Lordy, lordy, I hate spellchecker!
You guys are too smart. It is the 81-CC dollar based on PCGS Coinfacts information.
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, evn when irrefutably accurate.
https://www.pcgs.com/books/silver-dollars/Chapter15Listings-047.aspx
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, evn when irrefutably accurate.
85-CC Morgan would also qualify:
https://www.pcgs.com/books/silver-dollars/Chapter15Listings-082.aspx
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, evn when irrefutably accurate.
81-CC or 85-CC Morgan
There are way too many options for this, almost every commemorative fits this category.
85-CC given low circulated remainder.
Gonna get me a $50 Octagonal someday. Some. Day.
Modern commem, yes. But those are really NCLT. Classic commems, not necessarily.
Perhaps a flawed question. Needs more limits.
All comments reflect the opinion of the author, evn when irrefutably accurate.
How would it not be classic commems? Other than Columbians, Stone Mountains, Bookers, and Washington-Carvers (a few dates) all have mintages of under 300,000 and almost all are mint state.
From this list I think that there are more circulated examples of the Colombian and Stone Mountain half Dollars than you might think.
I agree, there is no way Columbians would be in this category but the others potentially could.
What I was saying is that all commemoratives (or a majority) other than those listed have mintages of under 300k.
Last two posters need to go see the optometrist - when the OP prefaced the comment with the phrase "Other than" it seems to me to cover exceptions for both higher mintages AND lower survival rates. I think the OP said it correctly.
How many of those commens were minted in the 19th century?