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Gold dollar

The gold dollar or gold one-dollar piece is a gold coin that was struck as a regular issue by the United States Bureau of the Mint from 1849 to 1889. The coin had three types over its lifetime, all designed by Mint Chief Engraver James B. Longacre. The Type 1 issue has the smallest diameter (0.5 inch =12.7mm) of any United States coin minted to date.

Gold dollar ($1)
United States
Value1 United States dollar
Mass1.672 g
DiameterFor Type 1, 12.7 mm. For Types 2 and 3, 14.3 mm (For Type 1, .500 inch. For types 2 and 3, .563 in)
EdgeReeded
Composition90% gold, 10% copper
Gold.04837 troy oz
Years of minting1849 (1849)–1889 (1889)
Mint marksC, D, O, S. Found immediately below the wreath on the reverse. Philadelphia Mint pieces lack mint mark.
Obverse
DesignLiberty wearing a coronet. Type 1.
DesignerJames B. Longacre
Design date1849
Design discontinued1854
DesignLiberty as an Indian princess. Type 2 (small head)
DesignerJames B. Longacre
Design date1854
Design discontinued1856
DesignType 3 (large head)
DesignerJames B. Longacre
Design date1856
Design discontinued1889
Reverse
DesignType 1
DesignerPeter Filatreu Cross
Design date1849
Design discontinued1854
DesignTypes 2 and 3
DesignerJames B. Longacre
Design date1854
Design discontinued1889

A gold dollar coin had been proposed several times in the 1830s and 1840s, but was not initially adopted. Congress was finally galvanized into action by the increased supply of bullion caused by the California gold rush, and in 1849 authorized a gold dollar. In its early years, silver coins were being hoarded or exported, and the gold dollar found a ready place in commerce. Silver again circulated after Congress in 1853 required that new coins of that metal be made lighter, and the gold dollar became a rarity in commerce even before federal coins vanished from circulation because of the economic disruption caused by the American Civil War.

Gold did not again circulate in most of the nation until 1879; once it did, the gold dollar did not regain its place. In its final years, it was struck in small numbers, causing speculation by hoarders. It was also in demand to be mounted in jewelry. The regular issue gold dollar was last struck in 1889; the following year, Congress ended the series.

Damaged common date gold dollars tend to be worth anywhere from melt value to about US$110 (as of 2017); common dates of higher circulated grades sell for about US$200 while rarer coins in high grades can be worth up to many thousands.

Background edit

In proposing his plan for a mint and a coinage system, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton in 1791 proposed that the one-dollar denomination be struck both as a gold coin, and as one of silver, representative of the two metals which he proposed be made legal tender.[1] Congress followed Hamilton's recommendation only in part, authorizing a silver dollar, but no coin of that denomination in gold.[2]

In 1831, the first gold dollar was minted, at the private mint of Christopher Bechtler in North Carolina. Much of the gold then being produced in the United States came from the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia, and the dollars and other small gold coins issued by Bechtler circulated through that region, and were now and then seen further away. Additional one-dollar pieces were struck by August Bechtler, Christopher's son.[3][4]

Soon after the Bechtlers began to strike their private issues, Secretary of the Treasury Levi Woodbury became an advocate of having the Mint of the United States ("Mint", when described as an institution) strike the one-dollar denomination in gold. He was opposed by the Mint Director, Robert M. Patterson. Woodbury persuaded President Andrew Jackson to have pattern coins struck. In response, Patterson had Mint Second Engraver Christian Gobrecht[a][3] break off work on the new design for the silver one-dollar coin and work on a pattern for the gold dollar. Gobrecht's design featured a Liberty cap surrounded by rays on one side, and a palm branch arranged in a circle with the denomination, date, and name of the country on the other.[3]

Consideration was given to including the gold dollar as an authorized denomination in the revisionary legislation that became the Mint Act of 1837. The Philadelphia newspaper Public Ledger, in December 1836, supported a gold dollar, stating that "the dollar is the smallest gold coin that would be convenient, and as it would be eminently so, neither silver nor paper should be allowed to take its place."[5] Nevertheless, after Mint Director Patterson appeared before a congressional committee, the provision authorizing the gold dollar was deleted from the bill.[6]

Inception edit

In January 1844, North Carolina Representative James Iver McKay, the chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means, solicited the views of Director Patterson on the gold dollar. Patterson had more of Gobrecht's pattern dollar struck to show to committee members, again advising against a coin that if issued would be only about a half inch (13 mm) in diameter. He told Treasury Secretary John C. Spencer that the only gold coins of that size in commerce, the Spanish and Colombian half-escudos, were unpopular and had not been struck for more than twenty years. This seemed to satisfy the committee as nothing more was done for the time, and when a gold dollar was proposed again in 1846, McKay's committee recommended against it.[7]

Even before 1848, record amounts of gold were flowing to American mints to be struck into coin, but the California Gold Rush vastly increased these quantities.[8] This renewed calls for a gold dollar, as well as for a higher denomination than the eagle ($10 piece), then the largest gold coin. In January 1849, McKay introduced a bill for a gold dollar, which was referred to his committee. There was much discussion in the press about the proposed coin; one newspaper published a proposal for an annular gold dollar; that is, with a hole in the middle to increase its small diameter. McKay amended his legislation to provide for a double eagle ($20 gold coin) and wrote to Patterson, who replied stating that the annular gold dollar would not work, and neither would another proposal to have dollar piece consisting of a gold plug in a silver coin.[9] Nevertheless, Gobrecht's successor as chief engraver, James B. Longacre, prepared patterns, including some with a square hole in the middle.[10]

McKay got his fellow Democrat, New Hampshire Senator Charles Atherton, to introduce the bill to authorize the gold dollar and the double eagle in the Senate on February 1, 1849—Atherton was chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. McKay introduced a version into the House on February 20; debate began the same day. The dollar was attacked by congressmen from the Whig Party, then in the minority, on the grounds that it would be too small, would be counterfeited and in bad light might be mistakenly spent as a half dime, the coins being similar in size. McKay did not respond substantively, but stated that if no one wanted these denominations, they would not be called for at the Mint, and would not be coined.[9] Pennsylvania Representative Joseph Ingersoll, a Whig, spoke against the bill, noting that Patterson opposed the new denominations, and that the idea had been repeatedly turned down, whenever considered. Another Whig, Massachusetts's Charles Hudson, related that Patterson had sent a real and a counterfeit gold dollar to his committee and the majority of members had been unable to tell the difference.[11] McKay made no answer to these claims, but others did, including New York Congressman Henry Nicoll, who assured the House that the counterfeiting allegations were greatly exaggerated. The point was, he indicated, that the double eagle and gold dollar were wanted by the public, and, in the case of the gold dollar could help money circulate in small communities where banknotes were not accepted. Connecticut Representative John A. Rockwell, a Whig, tried to table the bill, but his motion was defeated. The bill passed easily, and met only minimal opposition in the Senate, becoming law on March 3, 1849.[11]

Preparation edit

 
James B. Longacre, self-portrait (1845)

The officers at the Philadelphia Mint, including Chief Coiner Franklin Peale, were mostly the friends and relations of Director Patterson. The outsider in their midst was Chief Engraver[b] James B. Longacre,[12] successor to Gobrecht (who had died in 1844). A former copper-plate engraver, Longacre had been appointed through the political influence of South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun.[13]

When Longacre began work on the two new coins in early 1849, he had no one to assist him. Longacre wrote the following year that he had been warned by a Mint employee that one of the officers (undoubtedly Peale) planned to undermine the chief engraver's position by having the work of preparing designs and dies done outside Mint premises. Accordingly, when the gold coin bill became law, Longacre apprised Patterson that he was ready to begin work on the gold dollar. The Mint Director agreed, and after viewing a model of the head on the obverse, authorized Longacre to proceed with preparation of dies. According to Longacre,[14]

The engraving was unusually minute and required very close and incessant labor for several weeks. I made the original dies and hubs for making the working dies twice over, to secure their perfect adaptation to the coining machinery. I had a wish to execute this work single handed, that I might thus silently reply to those who had questioned my ability for the work. The result, I believe, was satisfactory.[14]

Original design edit

 
The head of Liberty on the Type 1 dollar resembles that on Longacre's Liberty Head double eagle.

The Type 1 gold dollar depicts a head of Liberty, facing left, with a coronet or tiara on her head bearing her name. Her hair is gathered in a bun; she is surrounded by 13 stars representing the original states. The reverse features the date and denomination within a wreath, with the name of the nation near the rim.[15]

Contemporary reviews of the Type 1 design were generally favorable. The New York Weekly Tribune on May 19, 1849, described the new dollar as "undoubtedly the neatest, tiniest, lightest, coin in this country ... it is too delicate and beautiful to pay out for potatoes, and sauerkraut, and salt pork. Oberon might have paid Puck with it for bringing the blossom which bewitched Titania."[16] Willis' Bank Note List stated that "there is no probability of them ever getting into general circulation; they are altogether too small."[17] The North Carolina Standard hoped that they would be struck at the Charlotte Mint and circulated locally to eliminate the problem of small-denomination bank notes from out of state.[17] Coin dealer and numismatic author Q. David Bowers notes that the head of Liberty on the Type 1 dollar is a scaled-down version of that on the double eagle, and "a nicely preserved gold dollar is beautiful to behold".[18]

Modifications edit

The 1849 gold dollar
 
Open wreath
 
Closed wreath

Mint records indicate the first gold dollars were produced on May 7, 1849; Longacre's diary notes state instead that the first were struck on May 8. A few coins in proof condition were struck on the first day, along with about 1,000 for circulation.[19][20] There are five major varieties of the 1849 gold dollar from Philadelphia, made as Longacre continued to fine-tune the design. Mintmarked dies were sent by Longacre's Engraving Department at the Philadelphia Mint to the branch mints at Charlotte, Dahlonega (in Georgia), and New Orleans; coins struck at the branches resemble some of the types issued from Philadelphia, depending on when the dies were produced. Of the coins struck at the branch mints in 1849, only pieces struck at Charlotte (1849-C) exist in multiple varieties; most are of what is dubbed the "Closed Wreath" variety. Approximately five of the 1849-C Open Wreath are known; one, believed the finest surviving specimen, sold at auction for $690,000 in 2004,[21] remaining a record for the gold dollar series as of 2013.[22] One of the changes made during production was the inclusion of Longacre's initial "L" on the truncation of Liberty's neck,[23] the first time a U.S. coin intended for full-scale production had borne the initial of its designer.[24] All issues beginning in 1850 bear the Closed Wreath.[25] Beginning in 1854, the gold dollar was also struck at the new San Francisco Mint.[26]

The continued flow of gold from California made silver expensive in terms of gold, and U.S. silver coins began to flow out of the country for melting in 1849, a flow that accelerated over the next several years as the price of the metal continued to rise. By 1853, a thousand dollars in silver coin contained $1,042 worth of bullion. As silver coins vanished, the gold dollar became the only federal coin in circulation between the cent and the quarter eagle ($2.50 piece). As such, it was struck in large numbers and widely circulated. According to Bowers in his book on the denomination, "the years 1850 to 1853 were the high-water mark of the gold dollar, the glory years of the denomination when the little gold coins took the place of half dollars and silver dollars in everyday transactions."[27] This time came to an end in 1853 when Congress passed an act reducing the weight of most silver coins, allowing new issues of them to circulate.[28]

As early as 1851, New York Congressman William Duer alleged that Patterson had made the gold dollar too small in diameter on purpose to provoke criticism. Patterson retired that year after 16 years in his position, and under his successor, George N. Eckert, annular gold dollar and half dollar patterns were struck. Public Ledger reported that although gold dollars would not be struck in annular form, gold half dollars would be, to help fill the need for change. With the new Pierce administration, Thomas M. Pettit took office as Mint Director on March 31, 1853. In April, Treasury Secretary James Guthrie wrote to Pettit that there were complaints that the gold dollar was too small, often lost or mistaken for a small silver coin, and enquired about reports that the Mint had experimented with annular dollars. Pettit replied, stating that none had been preserved, but enclosed a silver piece of equivalent size. He noted that while there would be technical difficulties in the production of the annular dollar, these could be overcome. In a letter dated May 10, Pettit proposed an oval-shaped holed piece, or an angular-shaped coin, which would lessen the production problems. Pettit died suddenly on May 31; Guthrie did not let the issue fall, but queried Pettit's replacement, James Ross Snowden, concerning the issue on June 7. As U.S. coins were required to bear some device emblematic of liberty, the secretary hoped that artists could be found who could find some such design for an annular coin.[29]

 
Longacre's design for the three-dollar piece (above) was adapted for the Types 2 and 3 gold dollar.

The Act of February 21, 1853, that had lightened the silver coins also authorized a gold three-dollar piece, which began to be produced in 1854. To ensure that the three-dollar piece was not mistaken for other gold coins, it had been made thinner and wider than it would normally be, and Longacre put a distinctive design with an Indian princess on it. Longacre adapted both the technique and the design for the gold dollar, which was made thinner, and thus wider. An adaptation of Longacre's princess for the larger gold coin was placed on the dollar, and a similar agricultural wreath on the reverse. The idea of making the gold dollar larger in this way had been suggested in Congress as early as 1852, and had been advocated by Pettit, but Guthrie's desire for an annular coin stalled the matter.[19][30] In May 1854, Snowden sent Guthrie a letter stating that the difficulties with an annular coin, especially in getting the coins to eject properly from the press, were more than trivial.[31]

Nevertheless, the Type 2 gold dollar (as it came to be known) proved unsatisfactory as the mints had difficulty in striking the new coin so that all details were brought out. This was due to the high relief of the design—the three Southern branch mints especially had trouble with the piece. Many of the Type 2 pieces quickly became illegible, and were sent back to Philadelphia for melting and recoinage.[32] On most surviving specimens, the "85" in the date is not fully detailed.[33] The Type 2 gold dollar was struck only at Philadelphia in 1854 and 1855, at the three Southern branch mints in the latter year, and at San Francisco in 1856, after the design was designated for replacement.[26][32] To correct the problems, Longacre enlarged the head of Liberty, making it a scaled-down version of the three-dollar piece, and moved the lettering on the obverse closer to the rim. This improved the metal flow and design sharpness so much that early numismatic scholars assumed the reverse was also altered, though in fact no change was made and the Type 2 and Type 3 reverses are identical.[31][33]

Design of Type 2 and 3 dollars edit

The Type 2 and 3 gold dollars depict Liberty as a Native American princess, with a fanciful feathered headdress not resembling any worn by any Indian tribe. This image is an inexact copy of the design Longacre had made for the three-dollar piece, and is one of a number of versions of Liberty that Longacre created based on the Venus Accroupie or Crouching Venus, a sculpture then on display in a Philadelphia museum. For the reverse, Longacre adapted the "agricultural wreath" he had created for the reverse of the three-dollar piece, composed of cotton, corn, tobacco, and wheat, blending the produce of North and South. This wreath would appear, later in the 1850s, on the Flying Eagle cent.[32][34]

Art historian Cornelius Vermeule deprecated the Indian princess design used by Longacre for the obverses of the Types 2 and 3 gold dollar, and for the three-dollar piece, "the 'princess' of the gold coins is a banknote engraver's[c] elegant version of folk art of the 1850s. The plumes or feathers are more like the crest of the Prince of Wales than anything that saw the Western frontiers, save perhaps on a music hall beauty."[34]

War years edit

The gold dollar continued to be produced in the late 1850s, though mintages declined from the figures of two million or more each year between 1850 and 1854. Only about 51,000 gold dollars were produced in 1860, with over two-thirds of that figure at Philadelphia, just under a third at San Francisco, and 1,566 at Dahlonega.[35] Roughly a hundred are known of the last, creating one of the great rarities from Dahlonega in the series.[36]

 
The 1861-D dollar

The other candidate for the rarest from that mint is the 1861-D, with an estimated mintage of 1,000 and perhaps 45 to 60 known.[37] Two pairs of dies were shipped from Philadelphia to Dahlonega on December 10, 1860; they arrived on January 7, 1861, two weeks before Georgia voted to secede from the Union, as the American Civil War began.[38] Under orders from Governor Joseph E. Brown, state militia secured the mint, and at some point, small quantities of dollars and half eagles were produced. Records of how many coins were struck and when have not survived. Since dies crack in time, and all the mints were supplied with them from Philadelphia, coining could not last, and in May 1861, coins and supplies remaining at Dahlonega were turned over to the treasury of the Confederate States of America, which Georgia had by then joined. Gold coins with a total face value of $6 were put aside for assay. Normally, they would have been sent to Philadelphia to await the following year's meeting of the United States Assay Commission, when they would be available for testing. Instead, these were sent to the initial Confederate capital of Montgomery, Alabama, though what was done with them there, and their ultimate fate, are unknown. The rarity of the 1861-D dollar, and the association with the Confederacy, make it especially prized.[39]

Dahlonega, like the other two branch mints in the South, closed its doors after the 1861 strikings. It and the Charlotte facility never reopened; the New Orleans Mint again struck coins from 1879 to 1909,[40] but did not strike gold dollars again. After 1861, the only issuance of gold dollars outside Philadelphia was at San Francisco, in 1870.[41]

The outbreak of the Civil War shook public confidence in the Union, and citizens began hoarding specie, gold and silver coins. In late December 1861, banks and then the federal Treasury stopped paying out gold at face value. By mid-1862, all federal coins, even the base metal cent, had vanished from commerce in much of the country. The exception was the Far West, where for the most part, only gold and silver were acceptable currencies, and paper money traded at a discount. In the rest of the nation, gold and silver coins could be purchased from banks, exchange agents, and from the Treasury for a premium in the new greenbacks the government began to issue to fill the gap in commerce and finance the war.[42]

Final years, abolition, and collecting edit

Since gold did not circulate in the United States (except on the West Coast) in the postwar period, much of the production of coins of that metal in the United States was double eagles for export.[43] Accordingly, although 1,361,355 gold dollars were struck in 1862—the last time production would exceed a million—the mintage fell to 6,200 in 1863 and remained low for the rest of the coin's existence, excepting 1873 and 1874. The Mint felt it improper to suspend coinage of a coin authorized by Congress, and issued proof coins (generally a few dozen to the tiny numismatic community) from specially-polished dies, also producing enough circulation strikes so that the proof coins would not be unduly rare. In 1873 and 1874, old and worn gold dollars held by the government were melted and recoined, generating large mintages of that denomination. This was done in anticipation of the resumption of specie payments, which did not occur until the end of 1878. Once specie again circulated at face value, the gold dollar found no place in commerce amid large quantities of silver coinage, either released from hoarding or newly struck by the Mint.[41][44] The government expected that the resumption of specie payments would cause the dollar and other small gold coins to circulate again, but the public, allowed to redeem paper currency, continued to use it as more convenient than coins.[45]

In the 1870s and 1880s, public interest grew in the low-mintage gold dollar. Collecting coins was becoming more popular, and a number of numismatists put aside some gold dollars and hoped for increases in value. The Mint most likely channeled its production through some favored Philadelphia dealers, though proof coins could be purchased for $1.25 at the cashier's window at the Philadelphia facility. Banks charged a premium for circulation strikes. They were popular in the jewelry trade, mounted into various items. The coins were often exported to China or Japan, where such jewelry was made. The dollars were often damaged in the process; the Mint refused to sell into this trade and did its best to hinder it. Nevertheless, Mint officials concluded that jewelers were successful at getting the majority of each issue. Proof mintages exceeded 1,000 by 1884, and remained above that mark for the remainder of the series, numbers likely inflated by agents of jewelers, willing to pay the Mint's premium of $0.25 per coin.[46] Another use for the gold dollar was as a holiday gift; after its abolition the quarter eagle became a popular present.[47]

James Pollock, in his final report as Mint Director in 1873, advocated limiting striking of gold dollars to depositors who specifically requested it. "The gold dollar is not a convenient coin, on account of its small size, and it suffers more proportionately from abrasion than larger coins."[48] His successors called for its abolition, with James P. Kimball, before he left office in 1889, writing to Congress that except as jewelry, "little practical use has been found for this coin".[49] Later that year, the new director, Edward O. Leech, issued a report stating that the gold dollar "is too small for circulation, and ... [is] used almost exclusively for the purposes of ornament.[49] The last year in which the gold dollar was struck was 1889.[41] Congress abolished the gold dollar, along with the three-cent nickel and three-dollar piece, by the Act of September 26, 1890.[50]

A total of 19,499,337 gold dollars were coined, of which 18,223,438 were struck at Philadelphia, 1,004,000 at New Orleans, 109,138 at Charlotte, 90,232 at San Francisco and 72,529 at Dahlonega.[51] According to an advertisement in the February 1899 issue of The Numismatist, gold dollars brought $1.80 each, still in demand as a birthday present and for jewelry. That journal in 1905 carried news of a customer depositing 100 gold dollars into a bank; the teller, aware of the value, credited the account with $1.60 per coin. In 1908, a dealer offered $2 each for any quantity.[52] As coin collecting became a widespread pastime in the early 20th century, gold dollars became a popular specialty, a status they retain.[53] The 2014 edition of R.S. Yeoman's A Guide Book of United States Coins rates the least expensive gold dollar in very fine condition (VF-20) at $300, a value given for each of the Type 1 Philadelphia issues from 1849 to 1853. Those seeking one of each type will find the most expensive to be a specimen of the Type 2, with the 1854 and 1855 estimated at $350 in that condition; the other two types have dates valued at $300 in that grade.[54]

Gold Sacagawea dollar edit

In 1999, the Philadelphia Mint struck 39 Sacagawea dollars (dated 2000 and the "W" mint mark of the West Point Mint) in 22 karat gold.[55] The Mint planned to sell gold Sacagawea dollars to collectors, but this plan was halted after Congressmen questioned the Mint's authority to strike dollars with a composition other than the one authorized.[56] Twenty-seven of these coins were destroyed soon after they were minted, and the remaining 12 flew on Space Shuttle Columbia during STS-93.[57] Afterwards the coins were displayed at various private events before being transferred to United States Bullion Depository at Fort Knox.

The coins were publicly displayed for the first time at the American Numismatic Association's World's Fair of Money in 2007. Afterwards they were returned to Fort Knox.[58]

Commemorative gold dollars edit

The gold dollar had a brief resurrection during the period of early United States commemorative coins. Between 1903 and 1922 nine different issues were produced, with a total mintage of 99,799. These were minted for various public events, did not circulate, and none used Longacre's design.

References edit

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Later chief engraver. See Taxay, p. 204. The incumbent chief engraver, William Kneass, had been partially incapacitated by a stroke in 1835, though he retained his office. See Taxay, pp. 170–171, 176
  2. ^ Formally, "Engraver to the United States Mint at Philadelphia"; he had no full-time assistant engravers then. The office came to be known as "Chief Engraver" later. See Bowers 2004, p. 25
  3. ^ As was Longacre, before he became chief engraver

References

  1. ^ Taxay, p. 50.
  2. ^ Taxay, p. 66.
  3. ^ a b c Bowers 2011, p. 1.
  4. ^ Yeoman, pp. 377–378.
  5. ^ Taxay, pp. 200–201.
  6. ^ Taxay, p. 200.
  7. ^ Taxay, p. 201.
  8. ^ Bowers 2001, p. 77.
  9. ^ a b Taxay, p. 203.
  10. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 3.
  11. ^ a b Taxay, p. 204.
  12. ^ Taxay, pp. 205–206.
  13. ^ Bowers 2006, p. 56.
  14. ^ a b Taxay, p. 206.
  15. ^ Bowers 2004, p. 25.
  16. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 4–5.
  17. ^ a b Bowers 2011, p. 5.
  18. ^ Bowers 2011, p. viii.
  19. ^ a b Breen, p. 476.
  20. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 4.
  21. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 62–75.
  22. ^ Yeoman, pp. 427–428.
  23. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 63–64.
  24. ^ Snow, p. 223.
  25. ^ Yeoman, p. 240.
  26. ^ a b Yeoman, p. 241.
  27. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 5–6.
  28. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 6.
  29. ^ Taxay, pp. 209–210.
  30. ^ Taxay, pp. 210–211.
  31. ^ a b Taxay, p. 211.
  32. ^ a b c Breen, p. 479.
  33. ^ a b Bowers 2011, p. 7.
  34. ^ a b Vermeule, p. 55.
  35. ^ Yeoman, pp. 241–242.
  36. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 170.
  37. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 176.
  38. ^ Breen, p. 482.
  39. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 13, 177.
  40. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 12–14.
  41. ^ a b c Yeoman, p. 242.
  42. ^ Taxay, pp. 227, 231.
  43. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 7–8.
  44. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 7–9, 214, 222.
  45. ^ Bowers 2001, pp. 90–91.
  46. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 8, 21.
  47. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 25.
  48. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 221.
  49. ^ a b Bowers 2011, p. 9.
  50. ^ Taxay, pp. 387–389.
  51. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 10.
  52. ^ Bowers 2011, p. 26.
  53. ^ Bowers 2011, pp. 28–31.
  54. ^ Yeoman, pp. 240–242.
  55. ^ "2000-W Gold Proof Sacagawea Dollar". www.smalldollars.com. Retrieved 2019-09-02.
  56. ^ Gilkes, Paul (March 8, 2010). "Special 2000–W Sacagawea Dollars Travel on Space Shuttle". Coin World: 122.
  57. ^ "US Mint to show unseen gold space coins | collectSPACE". collectSPACE.com. Retrieved 2019-06-27.
  58. ^ "United States Mint Displays Never–Before–Seen Gold Space Coins in Milwaukee | U.S. Mint". www.usmint.gov. Retrieved 2019-06-27.

Bibliography

Books:

External links edit

  • Gold Dollar (1849–1889) at PCGS
Preceded by Dollar coin of the United States (1849–1889)
Concurrent with:
Seated Liberty dollar (1849–1873)
Trade dollar (1873–1885)
Morgan dollar (1878–1889)
Succeeded by

gold, dollar, modern, gold, colored, dollar, series, dollar, coin, united, states, gold, dollar, gold, dollar, piece, gold, coin, that, struck, regular, issue, united, states, bureau, mint, from, 1849, 1889, coin, three, types, over, lifetime, designed, mint, . For the modern gold colored dollar series see Dollar coin United States The gold dollar or gold one dollar piece is a gold coin that was struck as a regular issue by the United States Bureau of the Mint from 1849 to 1889 The coin had three types over its lifetime all designed by Mint Chief Engraver James B Longacre The Type 1 issue has the smallest diameter 0 5 inch 12 7mm of any United States coin minted to date Gold dollar 1 United StatesValue1 United States dollarMass1 672 gDiameterFor Type 1 12 7 mm For Types 2 and 3 14 3 mm For Type 1 500 inch For types 2 and 3 563 in EdgeReededComposition90 gold 10 copperGold 04837 troy ozYears of minting1849 1849 1889 1889 Mint marksC D O S Found immediately below the wreath on the reverse Philadelphia Mint pieces lack mint mark ObverseDesignLiberty wearing a coronet Type 1 DesignerJames B LongacreDesign date1849Design discontinued1854DesignLiberty as an Indian princess Type 2 small head DesignerJames B LongacreDesign date1854Design discontinued1856DesignType 3 large head DesignerJames B LongacreDesign date1856Design discontinued1889ReverseDesignType 1DesignerPeter Filatreu CrossDesign date1849Design discontinued1854DesignTypes 2 and 3DesignerJames B LongacreDesign date1854Design discontinued1889A gold dollar coin had been proposed several times in the 1830s and 1840s but was not initially adopted Congress was finally galvanized into action by the increased supply of bullion caused by the California gold rush and in 1849 authorized a gold dollar In its early years silver coins were being hoarded or exported and the gold dollar found a ready place in commerce Silver again circulated after Congress in 1853 required that new coins of that metal be made lighter and the gold dollar became a rarity in commerce even before federal coins vanished from circulation because of the economic disruption caused by the American Civil War Gold did not again circulate in most of the nation until 1879 once it did the gold dollar did not regain its place In its final years it was struck in small numbers causing speculation by hoarders It was also in demand to be mounted in jewelry The regular issue gold dollar was last struck in 1889 the following year Congress ended the series Damaged common date gold dollars tend to be worth anywhere from melt value to about US 110 as of 2017 common dates of higher circulated grades sell for about US 200 while rarer coins in high grades can be worth up to many thousands Contents 1 Background 2 Inception 3 Preparation 4 Original design 5 Modifications 5 1 Design of Type 2 and 3 dollars 6 War years 7 Final years abolition and collecting 8 Gold Sacagawea dollar 9 Commemorative gold dollars 10 References 11 External linksBackground editIn proposing his plan for a mint and a coinage system Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton in 1791 proposed that the one dollar denomination be struck both as a gold coin and as one of silver representative of the two metals which he proposed be made legal tender 1 Congress followed Hamilton s recommendation only in part authorizing a silver dollar but no coin of that denomination in gold 2 In 1831 the first gold dollar was minted at the private mint of Christopher Bechtler in North Carolina Much of the gold then being produced in the United States came from the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia and the dollars and other small gold coins issued by Bechtler circulated through that region and were now and then seen further away Additional one dollar pieces were struck by August Bechtler Christopher s son 3 4 Soon after the Bechtlers began to strike their private issues Secretary of the Treasury Levi Woodbury became an advocate of having the Mint of the United States Mint when described as an institution strike the one dollar denomination in gold He was opposed by the Mint Director Robert M Patterson Woodbury persuaded President Andrew Jackson to have pattern coins struck In response Patterson had Mint Second Engraver Christian Gobrecht a 3 break off work on the new design for the silver one dollar coin and work on a pattern for the gold dollar Gobrecht s design featured a Liberty cap surrounded by rays on one side and a palm branch arranged in a circle with the denomination date and name of the country on the other 3 Consideration was given to including the gold dollar as an authorized denomination in the revisionary legislation that became the Mint Act of 1837 The Philadelphia newspaper Public Ledger in December 1836 supported a gold dollar stating that the dollar is the smallest gold coin that would be convenient and as it would be eminently so neither silver nor paper should be allowed to take its place 5 Nevertheless after Mint Director Patterson appeared before a congressional committee the provision authorizing the gold dollar was deleted from the bill 6 Inception editIn January 1844 North Carolina Representative James Iver McKay the chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means solicited the views of Director Patterson on the gold dollar Patterson had more of Gobrecht s pattern dollar struck to show to committee members again advising against a coin that if issued would be only about a half inch 13 mm in diameter He told Treasury Secretary John C Spencer that the only gold coins of that size in commerce the Spanish and Colombian half escudos were unpopular and had not been struck for more than twenty years This seemed to satisfy the committee as nothing more was done for the time and when a gold dollar was proposed again in 1846 McKay s committee recommended against it 7 Even before 1848 record amounts of gold were flowing to American mints to be struck into coin but the California Gold Rush vastly increased these quantities 8 This renewed calls for a gold dollar as well as for a higher denomination than the eagle 10 piece then the largest gold coin In January 1849 McKay introduced a bill for a gold dollar which was referred to his committee There was much discussion in the press about the proposed coin one newspaper published a proposal for an annular gold dollar that is with a hole in the middle to increase its small diameter McKay amended his legislation to provide for a double eagle 20 gold coin and wrote to Patterson who replied stating that the annular gold dollar would not work and neither would another proposal to have dollar piece consisting of a gold plug in a silver coin 9 Nevertheless Gobrecht s successor as chief engraver James B Longacre prepared patterns including some with a square hole in the middle 10 McKay got his fellow Democrat New Hampshire Senator Charles Atherton to introduce the bill to authorize the gold dollar and the double eagle in the Senate on February 1 1849 Atherton was chairman of the Senate Finance Committee McKay introduced a version into the House on February 20 debate began the same day The dollar was attacked by congressmen from the Whig Party then in the minority on the grounds that it would be too small would be counterfeited and in bad light might be mistakenly spent as a half dime the coins being similar in size McKay did not respond substantively but stated that if no one wanted these denominations they would not be called for at the Mint and would not be coined 9 Pennsylvania Representative Joseph Ingersoll a Whig spoke against the bill noting that Patterson opposed the new denominations and that the idea had been repeatedly turned down whenever considered Another Whig Massachusetts s Charles Hudson related that Patterson had sent a real and a counterfeit gold dollar to his committee and the majority of members had been unable to tell the difference 11 McKay made no answer to these claims but others did including New York Congressman Henry Nicoll who assured the House that the counterfeiting allegations were greatly exaggerated The point was he indicated that the double eagle and gold dollar were wanted by the public and in the case of the gold dollar could help money circulate in small communities where banknotes were not accepted Connecticut Representative John A Rockwell a Whig tried to table the bill but his motion was defeated The bill passed easily and met only minimal opposition in the Senate becoming law on March 3 1849 11 Preparation edit nbsp James B Longacre self portrait 1845 The officers at the Philadelphia Mint including Chief Coiner Franklin Peale were mostly the friends and relations of Director Patterson The outsider in their midst was Chief Engraver b James B Longacre 12 successor to Gobrecht who had died in 1844 A former copper plate engraver Longacre had been appointed through the political influence of South Carolina Senator John C Calhoun 13 When Longacre began work on the two new coins in early 1849 he had no one to assist him Longacre wrote the following year that he had been warned by a Mint employee that one of the officers undoubtedly Peale planned to undermine the chief engraver s position by having the work of preparing designs and dies done outside Mint premises Accordingly when the gold coin bill became law Longacre apprised Patterson that he was ready to begin work on the gold dollar The Mint Director agreed and after viewing a model of the head on the obverse authorized Longacre to proceed with preparation of dies According to Longacre 14 The engraving was unusually minute and required very close and incessant labor for several weeks I made the original dies and hubs for making the working dies twice over to secure their perfect adaptation to the coining machinery I had a wish to execute this work single handed that I might thus silently reply to those who had questioned my ability for the work The result I believe was satisfactory 14 Original design edit nbsp The head of Liberty on the Type 1 dollar resembles that on Longacre s Liberty Head double eagle The Type 1 gold dollar depicts a head of Liberty facing left with a coronet or tiara on her head bearing her name Her hair is gathered in a bun she is surrounded by 13 stars representing the original states The reverse features the date and denomination within a wreath with the name of the nation near the rim 15 Contemporary reviews of the Type 1 design were generally favorable The New York Weekly Tribune on May 19 1849 described the new dollar as undoubtedly the neatest tiniest lightest coin in this country it is too delicate and beautiful to pay out for potatoes and sauerkraut and salt pork Oberon might have paid Puck with it for bringing the blossom which bewitched Titania 16 Willis Bank Note List stated that there is no probability of them ever getting into general circulation they are altogether too small 17 The North Carolina Standard hoped that they would be struck at the Charlotte Mint and circulated locally to eliminate the problem of small denomination bank notes from out of state 17 Coin dealer and numismatic author Q David Bowers notes that the head of Liberty on the Type 1 dollar is a scaled down version of that on the double eagle and a nicely preserved gold dollar is beautiful to behold 18 Modifications editThe 1849 gold dollar nbsp Open wreath nbsp Closed wreath Mint records indicate the first gold dollars were produced on May 7 1849 Longacre s diary notes state instead that the first were struck on May 8 A few coins in proof condition were struck on the first day along with about 1 000 for circulation 19 20 There are five major varieties of the 1849 gold dollar from Philadelphia made as Longacre continued to fine tune the design Mintmarked dies were sent by Longacre s Engraving Department at the Philadelphia Mint to the branch mints at Charlotte Dahlonega in Georgia and New Orleans coins struck at the branches resemble some of the types issued from Philadelphia depending on when the dies were produced Of the coins struck at the branch mints in 1849 only pieces struck at Charlotte 1849 C exist in multiple varieties most are of what is dubbed the Closed Wreath variety Approximately five of the 1849 C Open Wreath are known one believed the finest surviving specimen sold at auction for 690 000 in 2004 21 remaining a record for the gold dollar series as of 2013 22 One of the changes made during production was the inclusion of Longacre s initial L on the truncation of Liberty s neck 23 the first time a U S coin intended for full scale production had borne the initial of its designer 24 All issues beginning in 1850 bear the Closed Wreath 25 Beginning in 1854 the gold dollar was also struck at the new San Francisco Mint 26 The continued flow of gold from California made silver expensive in terms of gold and U S silver coins began to flow out of the country for melting in 1849 a flow that accelerated over the next several years as the price of the metal continued to rise By 1853 a thousand dollars in silver coin contained 1 042 worth of bullion As silver coins vanished the gold dollar became the only federal coin in circulation between the cent and the quarter eagle 2 50 piece As such it was struck in large numbers and widely circulated According to Bowers in his book on the denomination the years 1850 to 1853 were the high water mark of the gold dollar the glory years of the denomination when the little gold coins took the place of half dollars and silver dollars in everyday transactions 27 This time came to an end in 1853 when Congress passed an act reducing the weight of most silver coins allowing new issues of them to circulate 28 As early as 1851 New York Congressman William Duer alleged that Patterson had made the gold dollar too small in diameter on purpose to provoke criticism Patterson retired that year after 16 years in his position and under his successor George N Eckert annular gold dollar and half dollar patterns were struck Public Ledger reported that although gold dollars would not be struck in annular form gold half dollars would be to help fill the need for change With the new Pierce administration Thomas M Pettit took office as Mint Director on March 31 1853 In April Treasury Secretary James Guthrie wrote to Pettit that there were complaints that the gold dollar was too small often lost or mistaken for a small silver coin and enquired about reports that the Mint had experimented with annular dollars Pettit replied stating that none had been preserved but enclosed a silver piece of equivalent size He noted that while there would be technical difficulties in the production of the annular dollar these could be overcome In a letter dated May 10 Pettit proposed an oval shaped holed piece or an angular shaped coin which would lessen the production problems Pettit died suddenly on May 31 Guthrie did not let the issue fall but queried Pettit s replacement James Ross Snowden concerning the issue on June 7 As U S coins were required to bear some device emblematic of liberty the secretary hoped that artists could be found who could find some such design for an annular coin 29 nbsp Longacre s design for the three dollar piece above was adapted for the Types 2 and 3 gold dollar The Act of February 21 1853 that had lightened the silver coins also authorized a gold three dollar piece which began to be produced in 1854 To ensure that the three dollar piece was not mistaken for other gold coins it had been made thinner and wider than it would normally be and Longacre put a distinctive design with an Indian princess on it Longacre adapted both the technique and the design for the gold dollar which was made thinner and thus wider An adaptation of Longacre s princess for the larger gold coin was placed on the dollar and a similar agricultural wreath on the reverse The idea of making the gold dollar larger in this way had been suggested in Congress as early as 1852 and had been advocated by Pettit but Guthrie s desire for an annular coin stalled the matter 19 30 In May 1854 Snowden sent Guthrie a letter stating that the difficulties with an annular coin especially in getting the coins to eject properly from the press were more than trivial 31 Nevertheless the Type 2 gold dollar as it came to be known proved unsatisfactory as the mints had difficulty in striking the new coin so that all details were brought out This was due to the high relief of the design the three Southern branch mints especially had trouble with the piece Many of the Type 2 pieces quickly became illegible and were sent back to Philadelphia for melting and recoinage 32 On most surviving specimens the 85 in the date is not fully detailed 33 The Type 2 gold dollar was struck only at Philadelphia in 1854 and 1855 at the three Southern branch mints in the latter year and at San Francisco in 1856 after the design was designated for replacement 26 32 To correct the problems Longacre enlarged the head of Liberty making it a scaled down version of the three dollar piece and moved the lettering on the obverse closer to the rim This improved the metal flow and design sharpness so much that early numismatic scholars assumed the reverse was also altered though in fact no change was made and the Type 2 and Type 3 reverses are identical 31 33 Design of Type 2 and 3 dollars edit The Type 2 and 3 gold dollars depict Liberty as a Native American princess with a fanciful feathered headdress not resembling any worn by any Indian tribe This image is an inexact copy of the design Longacre had made for the three dollar piece and is one of a number of versions of Liberty that Longacre created based on the Venus Accroupie or Crouching Venus a sculpture then on display in a Philadelphia museum For the reverse Longacre adapted the agricultural wreath he had created for the reverse of the three dollar piece composed of cotton corn tobacco and wheat blending the produce of North and South This wreath would appear later in the 1850s on the Flying Eagle cent 32 34 Art historian Cornelius Vermeule deprecated the Indian princess design used by Longacre for the obverses of the Types 2 and 3 gold dollar and for the three dollar piece the princess of the gold coins is a banknote engraver s c elegant version of folk art of the 1850s The plumes or feathers are more like the crest of the Prince of Wales than anything that saw the Western frontiers save perhaps on a music hall beauty 34 War years editThe gold dollar continued to be produced in the late 1850s though mintages declined from the figures of two million or more each year between 1850 and 1854 Only about 51 000 gold dollars were produced in 1860 with over two thirds of that figure at Philadelphia just under a third at San Francisco and 1 566 at Dahlonega 35 Roughly a hundred are known of the last creating one of the great rarities from Dahlonega in the series 36 nbsp The 1861 D dollarThe other candidate for the rarest from that mint is the 1861 D with an estimated mintage of 1 000 and perhaps 45 to 60 known 37 Two pairs of dies were shipped from Philadelphia to Dahlonega on December 10 1860 they arrived on January 7 1861 two weeks before Georgia voted to secede from the Union as the American Civil War began 38 Under orders from Governor Joseph E Brown state militia secured the mint and at some point small quantities of dollars and half eagles were produced Records of how many coins were struck and when have not survived Since dies crack in time and all the mints were supplied with them from Philadelphia coining could not last and in May 1861 coins and supplies remaining at Dahlonega were turned over to the treasury of the Confederate States of America which Georgia had by then joined Gold coins with a total face value of 6 were put aside for assay Normally they would have been sent to Philadelphia to await the following year s meeting of the United States Assay Commission when they would be available for testing Instead these were sent to the initial Confederate capital of Montgomery Alabama though what was done with them there and their ultimate fate are unknown The rarity of the 1861 D dollar and the association with the Confederacy make it especially prized 39 Dahlonega like the other two branch mints in the South closed its doors after the 1861 strikings It and the Charlotte facility never reopened the New Orleans Mint again struck coins from 1879 to 1909 40 but did not strike gold dollars again After 1861 the only issuance of gold dollars outside Philadelphia was at San Francisco in 1870 41 The outbreak of the Civil War shook public confidence in the Union and citizens began hoarding specie gold and silver coins In late December 1861 banks and then the federal Treasury stopped paying out gold at face value By mid 1862 all federal coins even the base metal cent had vanished from commerce in much of the country The exception was the Far West where for the most part only gold and silver were acceptable currencies and paper money traded at a discount In the rest of the nation gold and silver coins could be purchased from banks exchange agents and from the Treasury for a premium in the new greenbacks the government began to issue to fill the gap in commerce and finance the war 42 Final years abolition and collecting editSince gold did not circulate in the United States except on the West Coast in the postwar period much of the production of coins of that metal in the United States was double eagles for export 43 Accordingly although 1 361 355 gold dollars were struck in 1862 the last time production would exceed a million the mintage fell to 6 200 in 1863 and remained low for the rest of the coin s existence excepting 1873 and 1874 The Mint felt it improper to suspend coinage of a coin authorized by Congress and issued proof coins generally a few dozen to the tiny numismatic community from specially polished dies also producing enough circulation strikes so that the proof coins would not be unduly rare In 1873 and 1874 old and worn gold dollars held by the government were melted and recoined generating large mintages of that denomination This was done in anticipation of the resumption of specie payments which did not occur until the end of 1878 Once specie again circulated at face value the gold dollar found no place in commerce amid large quantities of silver coinage either released from hoarding or newly struck by the Mint 41 44 The government expected that the resumption of specie payments would cause the dollar and other small gold coins to circulate again but the public allowed to redeem paper currency continued to use it as more convenient than coins 45 In the 1870s and 1880s public interest grew in the low mintage gold dollar Collecting coins was becoming more popular and a number of numismatists put aside some gold dollars and hoped for increases in value The Mint most likely channeled its production through some favored Philadelphia dealers though proof coins could be purchased for 1 25 at the cashier s window at the Philadelphia facility Banks charged a premium for circulation strikes They were popular in the jewelry trade mounted into various items The coins were often exported to China or Japan where such jewelry was made The dollars were often damaged in the process the Mint refused to sell into this trade and did its best to hinder it Nevertheless Mint officials concluded that jewelers were successful at getting the majority of each issue Proof mintages exceeded 1 000 by 1884 and remained above that mark for the remainder of the series numbers likely inflated by agents of jewelers willing to pay the Mint s premium of 0 25 per coin 46 Another use for the gold dollar was as a holiday gift after its abolition the quarter eagle became a popular present 47 James Pollock in his final report as Mint Director in 1873 advocated limiting striking of gold dollars to depositors who specifically requested it The gold dollar is not a convenient coin on account of its small size and it suffers more proportionately from abrasion than larger coins 48 His successors called for its abolition with James P Kimball before he left office in 1889 writing to Congress that except as jewelry little practical use has been found for this coin 49 Later that year the new director Edward O Leech issued a report stating that the gold dollar is too small for circulation and is used almost exclusively for the purposes of ornament 49 The last year in which the gold dollar was struck was 1889 41 Congress abolished the gold dollar along with the three cent nickel and three dollar piece by the Act of September 26 1890 50 A total of 19 499 337 gold dollars were coined of which 18 223 438 were struck at Philadelphia 1 004 000 at New Orleans 109 138 at Charlotte 90 232 at San Francisco and 72 529 at Dahlonega 51 According to an advertisement in the February 1899 issue of The Numismatist gold dollars brought 1 80 each still in demand as a birthday present and for jewelry That journal in 1905 carried news of a customer depositing 100 gold dollars into a bank the teller aware of the value credited the account with 1 60 per coin In 1908 a dealer offered 2 each for any quantity 52 As coin collecting became a widespread pastime in the early 20th century gold dollars became a popular specialty a status they retain 53 The 2014 edition of R S Yeoman s A Guide Book of United States Coins rates the least expensive gold dollar in very fine condition VF 20 at 300 a value given for each of the Type 1 Philadelphia issues from 1849 to 1853 Those seeking one of each type will find the most expensive to be a specimen of the Type 2 with the 1854 and 1855 estimated at 350 in that condition the other two types have dates valued at 300 in that grade 54 Gold Sacagawea dollar editMain article Sacagawea dollar Gold dollars In 1999 the Philadelphia Mint struck 39 Sacagawea dollars dated 2000 and the W mint mark of the West Point Mint in 22 karat gold 55 The Mint planned to sell gold Sacagawea dollars to collectors but this plan was halted after Congressmen questioned the Mint s authority to strike dollars with a composition other than the one authorized 56 Twenty seven of these coins were destroyed soon after they were minted and the remaining 12 flew on Space Shuttle Columbia during STS 93 57 Afterwards the coins were displayed at various private events before being transferred to United States Bullion Depository at Fort Knox The coins were publicly displayed for the first time at the American Numismatic Association s World s Fair of Money in 2007 Afterwards they were returned to Fort Knox 58 Commemorative gold dollars editThe gold dollar had a brief resurrection during the period of early United States commemorative coins Between 1903 and 1922 nine different issues were produced with a total mintage of 99 799 These were minted for various public events did not circulate and none used Longacre s design References editExplanatory notes Later chief engraver See Taxay p 204 The incumbent chief engraver William Kneass had been partially incapacitated by a stroke in 1835 though he retained his office See Taxay pp 170 171 176 Formally Engraver to the United States Mint at Philadelphia he had no full time assistant engravers then The office came to be known as Chief Engraver later See Bowers 2004 p 25 As was Longacre before he became chief engraver References Taxay p 50 Taxay p 66 a b c Bowers 2011 p 1 Yeoman pp 377 378 Taxay pp 200 201 Taxay p 200 Taxay p 201 Bowers 2001 p 77 a b Taxay p 203 Bowers 2011 p 3 a b Taxay p 204 Taxay pp 205 206 Bowers 2006 p 56 a b Taxay p 206 Bowers 2004 p 25 Bowers 2011 pp 4 5 a b Bowers 2011 p 5 Bowers 2011 p viii a b Breen p 476 Bowers 2011 p 4 Bowers 2011 pp 62 75 Yeoman pp 427 428 Bowers 2011 pp 63 64 Snow p 223 Yeoman p 240 a b Yeoman p 241 Bowers 2011 pp 5 6 Bowers 2011 p 6 Taxay pp 209 210 Taxay pp 210 211 a b Taxay p 211 a b c Breen p 479 a b Bowers 2011 p 7 a b Vermeule p 55 Yeoman pp 241 242 Bowers 2011 p 170 Bowers 2011 p 176 Breen p 482 Bowers 2011 pp 13 177 Bowers 2011 pp 12 14 a b c Yeoman p 242 Taxay pp 227 231 Bowers 2011 pp 7 8 Bowers 2011 pp 7 9 214 222 Bowers 2001 pp 90 91 Bowers 2011 pp 8 21 Bowers 2011 p 25 Bowers 2011 p 221 a b Bowers 2011 p 9 Taxay pp 387 389 Bowers 2011 p 10 Bowers 2011 p 26 Bowers 2011 pp 28 31 Yeoman pp 240 242 2000 W Gold Proof Sacagawea Dollar www smalldollars com Retrieved 2019 09 02 Gilkes Paul March 8 2010 Special 2000 W Sacagawea Dollars Travel on Space Shuttle Coin World 122 US Mint to show unseen gold space coins collectSPACE collectSPACE com Retrieved 2019 06 27 United States Mint Displays Never Before Seen Gold Space Coins in Milwaukee U S Mint www usmint gov Retrieved 2019 06 27 BibliographyBooks Bowers Q David 2001 The Harry W Bass Jr Museum Sylloge Dallas TX Harry W Bass Jr Foundation ISBN 0 943161 88 6 Bowers Q David 2004 A Guide Book of Double Eagle Gold Coins Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 1784 8 Bowers Q David 2011 A Guide Book of Gold Dollars 2nd ed Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 3241 4 Bowers Q David 2006 A Guide Book of Shield and Liberty Head Nickels Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 0 7948 1921 4 Breen Walter 1988 Walter Breen s Complete Encyclopedia of U S and Colonial Coins New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 14207 6 Snow Richard 2009 A Guide Book of Flying Eagle and Indian Head Cents Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 2831 8 Taxay Don 1983 The U S Mint and Coinage reprint of 1966 ed New York Sanford J Durst Numismatic Publications ISBN 978 0 915262 68 7 Vermeule Cornelius 1971 Numismatic Art in America Cambridge MA The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 62840 3 Yeoman R S 2013 A Guide Book of United States Coins The Official Red Book 67th ed Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 4180 5 External links edit nbsp Money portal nbsp Numismatics portal nbsp United States portalGold Dollar 1849 1889 at PCGSPreceded bySeated Liberty dollar Dollar coin of the United States 1849 1889 Concurrent with Seated Liberty dollar 1849 1873 Trade dollar 1873 1885 Morgan dollar 1878 1889 Succeeded byMorgan dollar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gold dollar amp oldid 1195652151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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