jkurtenbach 的钱币相册

1873 T$1 Trade XF45 PCGS #7031

A nice, crusty example of the first Trade Dollar

1873-CC T$1 Trade VF20 PCGS #7032

MPD FS-301 and “Wide CC”. The “Wide CC” (1.2mm) Trade dollars are a well known subset of the series among Trade dollar collectors. Starting with the 1873-CC and ending with the 1876-CC, a small number from each year were minted using the same reverse die with a 1.2mm wide, small "c c" mint mark. Until the recent discoveries of three 1875's, the only examples were from 1873, 1874 and 1876. All are rare or scarce, with the 75-CC the undisputed king, followed by the 74-CC and 73-CC, and then the slightly more common 76-CC. This coin is also the MPD FS-301 variety. I plan to get it attributed in my next submission. Formerly in an NGC VF20 slab, cracked out and submitted raw.

1873-CC T$1 Trade VF25 PCGS #7032

MPD FS-302. The tops of a 1, 8 and 7 can be clearly seen in the denticles below the date

1873-CC T$1 Trade XF45 PCGS #7032

A very nice, original, sharply struck example, and CAC approves!

1873-S T$1 Trade XF45 PCGS #7033

Nice, original problem free example of this surprisingly tough date. Check the pops on the 73-S; there aren't a lot of them around. Formerly in an ANACS small white at AU50, now properly (IMO) graded at XF45.

1874 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7034

Great color and surfaces on this surprisingly tough date

1874-CC T$1 VF35 PCGS #7035

"Wide CC". Purportedly the second toughest of the "Wide CC" subset to find after the extremely rare 1875.

1874-CC T$1 AU53 PCGS #7035

Not much to say about this one other than it fills the hole. Not ugly, but not up to my usual standards...

1874-S T$1 AU58 PCGS #7036

Very nice, original coin with attractive color

1875 T$1 AU53 PCGS #7037

Type 2 Reverse. Nicely struck coin with pale lavender surfaces and copper highlights

1875-CC T$1 VF30 PCGS #7038

“Wide CC”. For years collectors wondered about the apparent gap year of 1875 in the “Wide CC” subset, searching in vain for an example. Then, a couple years ago a board member here found the first 1875 “Wide CC” and shortly after that another was found. Both have issues, grading XF details (one is cleaned, the other has minor rim damage). A fourth was found in 2022, currently in an NGC XF Details "Cleaned" holder. "Mine was plucked off of Ebay in early 2020. It is a very wholesome looking coin, grading VF30. At this time, it is the only known, no problem straight graded example of this very rare variety, which kinda makes it the “Finest Known”. With only four known examples, it is a true king of Trade Dollar varieties.

1875-CC T$1 AU55 PCGS #7038

Type 1 Reverse. Plenty of luster with golden highlights

1875-CC T$1 AU55 PCGS #7038

Type 2 Reverse. Pale lavender with russet highlights. A little spotty on the reverse, but ehh, not too bad...

1875-S T$1 AU55 PCGS #7039

Type 2 Reverse. Thanks go out to TennesseeDave for this lustrous coin.

1876 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7041

Type 1 Obverse, Type 1 Reverse, Broken Letters reverse. A nice, colorful example.

1876 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7041

Type 1 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse. Dark lavender surfaces and well struck

1876 T$1 AU58 PCGS #7041

Type 1.5 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse. No one is quite sure what this variety represents; is it a transitional between the Type 1 and 2 obverses? Or something else? In any case, the obverse LIBERTY ribbon points to the left as in a Type 1 coin, but Liberty's outstretched hand has 4 fingers as in a Type 2 coin. A great example of this tough variety and thanks to OriginalDan for passing it along to me.

1876-CC T$1 XF45 PCGS #7042

Type 2 Reverse. A nice, crusty original coin

1876-CC T$1 AU58 PCGS #7042

Type 1 Reverse. A very tough die marriage, the same reverse was also used for a few 1875 CCs. Note the missing serif on the "I" in America.

1876-S T$1 AU55 PCGS #7043

Type 1 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse.

1876-S T$1 AU58 PCGS #7043

Type 1 Obverse, Type 1 Reverse

1877-CC T$1 AU50 PCGS #7045

Nice lavender toning and CAC approved.

1877-S T$1 XF40 PCGS #7046

Appealing gray surfaces and the scarce "Broken Arrows" variety. This wear level really exhibits the broken arrows nicely.

1878-CC T$1 Trade AU50 PCGS #7047

Sharply struck (check out Liberty's head) and plenty of luster in the hidden areas, I think this one could easily go up a notch...

1878-S T$1 Trade AU58 PCGS #7048

Sharp strike and minimal high point wear.

1876 T$1 PR62 PCGS #7056

Type 1 Obverse, Type 1 Reverse. The only proof in my collection, but it's a nice one. The rarest of the four 1876 proof types, this was cracked out of an NGC PL holder.

1875 T$1 Type-I/I MS60 PCGS #40106

Type 1 Obverse, Type 1 Reverse. This is a really tough coin as a business strike. And this is a "no doubt" business strike with all of the diagnostic pick-up points. Well struck and lustrous and conservatively graded at 60 (IMO it could easily go 62). Many thanks to OriginalDan for allowing me keep this one safe for the foreseeable future.

1876-CC T$1 Type-I/I AU55 PCGS #40112

Type 1 Obverse, Type 1 Reverse, "Wide CC". The final cog in the "Wide CC" subset and a nice looking one at that (CAC approved). Sharply struck with golden tones, thanks to Crusty for a great swap!

1876-S T$1 Type-II/II AU53 PCGS #40116

Type 2 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse, "Large S". A great looking, conservatively graded example of this tough variety. Ex-Crypto

1876-CC T$1 Doubled Die Reverse AU58 PCGS #97042

Type 1 Reverse, DDR. Well struck, golden tones, mucho luster and only the slightest hint of wear. Thanks go out to Stealer for this one.

1876-CC T$1 Doubled Die Reverse AU58 PCGS #97042

Type 1 Reverse, DDR. Well struck, golden tones, mucho luster and only the slightest hint of wear. Thanks go out to Stealer for this one.

1877 T$1 FS-101, C-13 DDO MS61 PCGS #145696

DDO FS-101. Gorgeous, lustrous example of this scarce variety. Look for doubling in the rightmost obverse stars and LIBERTY. Special thanks to Keoj for passing this one along to me.

1878-S T$1 FS-801 DDR AU53 PCGS #145808

DDR FS-801. Clear doubling on the arrows, 420 Grains and UNITED

1877-S T$1 FS-802 DDR AU55 PCGS #145810

DDR FS-802. A sharp strike with attractive toning and light wear. Looks 58 all day to me - might have been dinged for the toning (BWDIK - it was graded by the same grader who didn't recognize an obvious 1875 S/CC FS-501...) Purchased at a Heritage auction in an unattributed NGC AU58 holder.

1877-S T$1 FS-802 DDR AU55 PCGS #145810

DDR FS-802. A sharp strike with attractive toning and light wear. Looks 58 all day to me - might have been dinged for the toning (BWDIK - it was graded by the same grader who didn't recognize an obvious 1875 S/CC FS-501...) Purchased at a Heritage auction in an unattributed NGC AU58 holder.

1877-S T$1 FS-801, C-46 DDR VF35 PCGS #145811

DDR FS-801. Nice, crusty original example of this tough variety.

1877-S T$1 FS-301, C-21 RPD & RPM N1 PCGS #145812

FS-301 Repunched Date. Original surfaces and solid XF details, the repunched last 7 is clearly evident. But, light scratches over the eagle's right wing on the reverse prevent a straight grade...

1875-S/CC T$1 FS-501 OMM XF40 PCGS #145813

Type 1 Reverse, S/CC FS-501. Nice original surfaces and a very clear over-mintmark "C" - a perfect match to my FS-502

1876-S T$1 FS-301 RPD N1 PCGS #402060

Type 2 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse, FS-301 Repunched Date. Sharp AU58 details and nice color, but with an invisible old cleaning under all of the toning.

1876-S T$1 FS-101 DDO N1 PCGS #504850

Never in a million years did I think I would find one of these in the wild. This one was captured on Ebay, listed in a bullion category. I thought it would straight grade, but it came back VF Details, Cleaned. Still, it has a nice look and when you consider that most of the other examples of this extreme rarity have major problems, it is one of the more pleasing examples known.

1876 T$1 Type II/II F15 PCGS #510103

Type 2 Obverse, Type 2 Reverse. A very scarce die marriage and a key to the set. Plucked this one raw off Ebay. With lots of honest wear but not overly unnatractive.

1875-S/CC T$1 FS-502, C-7 OMM XF40 PCGS #512236

Type 1 Reverse, S/CC FS-502. Harder to see and harder to find, the mint workers did a better job obliterating the CC mint mark than they did on its sister S/CC, the FS-501. But diagnostic die cracks throughout the reverse and the mint mark position positively identify this as the FS-502. A nice, undergraded original example. With thanks to OriginalDan.