Picture 1 of 1
Picture 1 of 1
1886 $1 Morgan Silver Dollar PCGS MS61 CLEAN!
US $78.00
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Located in: Littleton, Colorado, United States
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Estimated between Wed, May 29 and Mon, Jun 3 to 43230
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eBay item number:355661519041
Item specifics
- Denomination
- $1
- Circulated/Uncirculated
- Uncirculated
- Coin
- Morgan
- Fineness
- 0.9
- Grade
- PR 61
- Country/Region of Manufacture
- United States
- Certification
- PCGS
- Composition
- 90% Silver, 10% Copper
- Year
- 1886
- Strike Type
- Business
- Mint Location
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
About this product
Product Information
<h2>Q. David Bowers</h2>The following narrative, with minor editing, is from my "Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States: A Complete Encyclopedia" (Wolfeboro, NH: Bowers and Merena Galleries, Inc., 1993)<br/><br/>Coinage Context<br/><br/>Record breaking: The coinage of 19,963,000 circulation strike silver dollars at the Philadelphia Mint in 1886 broke all previous production records for the denomination. However, in the following year, 1887, the Philadelphia Mint would go on to still another high.<br/><br/>President no fan of dollars: President Grover Cleveland stated the following.(As quoted by Chester West in "Chester West Tells It As It Is-Of Federal and State Government Regulations," in The Comprehensive U. S. Silver Dollar Encyclopedia.)<br/>Last year we spent 23 million dollars plus labor and storage for silver dollars that no one wants. Now we have 247 million of them. This gamble on a silver price increase is a bust. In the beginning, when we bought the silver, the dollar content was 94.5 cents. On the 31st day of July 1886, silver dropped to its lowest price. Now these things are only worth 78 cents.<br/><br/>Numismatic Information<br/><br/>Hoard coins: Quantities of 1886 dollars were re-leased by the Treasury over a long period of years, with a large number coming out in 1951, 1952, and, especially, December 1954. Within the memory of any numismatists living today, the 1886 Philadelphia issue has been one of the most common issues in just about any grade from well-worn to MS-65. In 1962-1964 more bags were set free by the Treasury, some of which ended up in the coffers of the Continental-Illinois Bank.<br/><br/>In the 1950s, anyone finding a $1,000 bag of 1886 dollars would "throw it back" to the bank, like a fisherman tossing back an undersized trout. Bags of these and most other early Philadelphia Mint Morgan dollars were not wanted, even for face value. If a buyer could be found - and I remember the situation well - a good wholesale price would be $1,100.<br/>Circulated grades: 1886 dollars are very common in worn grades.<br/><br/>Mint State grades: Mint State 1886 dollars are very common. Examples are frequently encountered in all grades from MS-60 through MS-64, and even MS-65 coins are easy to find. Only the 1887 rivals the 1886 in availability among Philadelphia Mint dollars dated before 1921.<br/><br/>Many 1886 dollars are very well struck and have much lustre, although the lustre is often more satiny or "greasy" than deeply frosty. Other coins are poorly struck, particularly at the center of the reverse. Some coins have irregular "metal flow" granularity, especially in the fields and at the borders, and are not numismatically appealing. All in all, there is a very wide variation in quality among Mint State dollars of this date. Careful buying is advised, especially if you are at all concerned with aesthetics. In the same technical numerical grade, a poorly struck coin with unattractive surfaces might not be worth half as much as a sharply struck, lustrous gem.<br/><br/>Prooflike coins: While semi-prooflike and prooflike coins are very common, high-grade cameo DMPL coins with good striking characteristics are rare. Hundreds in the latter category exist.<br/><br/>Varieties<br/><br/>Circulation strikes:<br/><br/>1. Normal date: Probably all the 63 obverses and 60 reverses were used until they were worn out. The two distinct styles of date, Even 6, Breen-5586 and High 6, Breen-5588 (VAM-6, 8), apparently represent two different logotypes; which is scarcer has not been determined. The last two shown to Walter H. Breen as "1886/5" had high 6 punched over lower 6; apparently, this is more wishful thinking, than an overdate. High 6 normally has closed 6; Even 6 comes open (e.g., VAM-7) or closed. Some varieties have interesting die chips and gouges around the date and elsewhere
Product Identifiers
Designer
George T. Morgan
eBay Product ID (ePID)
170472438
Product Key Features
Strike Type
Business
Mint Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Composition
90% Silver, 10% Copper
Year
1886
Dimensions
Weight
26.73g
Additional Product Features
Mintage
19963
EDGE
Reeded
Mint
Philadelphia
Denomination
$1
PCGS Number
7166
Diameter
38.1mm
Mint Mark
P
Item description from the seller
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
eBay item number:355661519041
Shipping and handling
Item location:
Littleton, Colorado, United States
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United States
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Barbados, French Guiana, French Polynesia, Guadeloupe, Libya, Martinique, New Caledonia, Reunion, Russian Federation, Ukraine, Venezuela
Shipping and handling | To | Service | Delivery*See Delivery notes |
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US $4.11 | United States | Standard Shipping (USPS Ground Advantage®) | Estimated between Wed, May 29 and Mon, Jun 3 to 43230 |
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Will usually ship within 3 business days of receiving cleared payment. |
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3***7 (36)- Feedback left by buyer.
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Fast shipping and great packaging! exactly as described.
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