1882 3CN, CAM PR67CAM 认证号50106058, PCGS号83778

专家评论

Charles Morgan

The 1882 Three-Cent Nickel Proof

Often unfairly dismissed as a mere "type set" filler, the Three-Cent Nickel is an approachable 19th-century American coin series. with very few coins that would stand in the way of a dedicated collector seeking to assemble a full set of business strikes or Proofs.

Starting in 1865, the Mint produced Proof versions for every year of the coin’s production. For issues struck through 1876, mintages typically ranged between 600 and 1,100 pieces. In 1878 (the second of two consecutive Proof-only years), production surged to over 2,000 pieces. From that point until the series’ termination in 1889, Proofs remained plentiful, with annual outputs routinely exceeding 3,000.

Varieties and Die States

The 1882 Three-Cent Nickel Proof (#3778) has a reported mintage of 3,100 and boasts a high survival rate in "Gem" (PCGS Proof 65) or better. In his definitive work, United States Proof Coins, Volume II: Nickel (2023), numismatist John Dannreuther identifies five die marriages for this year, struck from two obverse and three reverse dies.

Dannreuther differentiates the obverse dies by the date’s position relative to the denticles below. The JD-2 variety, for instance, is unknown in "Perfect Die State"; it consistently displays a diagnostic die crack running from 10 o’clock to the left wreath leaves. The overwhelming majority of known 1882 Proofs are of the JD-1 variety, which was likely the primary die pair used for the initial production run. On many JD-1 examples, one can observe a series of long vertical and diagonal die lines running through the center of the reverse.

Survival Rate

The 1882 Three-Cent Nickel Proof, despite having a mintage considerably lower than the 1882 business strike (3,436 vs. 22,200), is actually the more common of the two coins in today’s market. To date, PCGS has certified approximately 43% of the original Proof mintage, yet only 16.9% of those graded exhibit any degree of Cameo contrast. Deep Cameos are exceptionally rare, with only five examples certified to date; the three finest known specimens are currently tied at PR67DCAM.

Vintage Market Snippets

The U.S. Mint originally sold the 1882 Three-Cent Nickel Proof individually and as part of the annual Minor Proof Set (Cent, Three-Cent, and Nickel) and the Silver Proof Set. Records indicate approximately 2,000 Minor Proof Sets were sold that year. Historically, some numismatists recognized the value of these coins early on. A.M. Smith, publisher of the Illustrated History of the U.S. Mint (1881), was known to have purchased them in quantity, reportedly owning at least 17 Minor Sets and 48 individual 1882 Three-Cent Nickels.

 

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PCGS #
83778
设计师
James Barton Longacre
边缘
Plain
直径
17.90 毫米
重量
1.94 克
铸币数量
3100
金属成分
75% Copper, 25% Nickel
更高评级数量
15
评级较低的钱币数量
165
地区
The United States of America
价格指南
PCGS 数量报告
拍卖 - PCGS 评级的
拍卖 - NGC 评级的

状况普查 了解更多

位置 评级 缩略图 家谱和历史
1 PCGS PR68+CAM PCGS PR68+CAM

Legend Rare Coin Auctions, March 26, 2020, Lot 190 – Passed; Dell Loy Hansen; "The D.L. Hansen U.S. Coin Design Set (1792-Present)" (PCGS Set Registry).

2 PCGS PR68CAM PCGS PR68CAM

Stack's Bowers, March 25, 2020, Lot 1129 - $3,600; "The KCV Nickels Type Set" (PCGS Set Registry).

2 PCGS PR68CAM

Bruce Scher; R. Iskowitz; "The Carnton Collection, Part II," Heritage Auctions, November 2, 2017, Lot 16650 – $6,900. "The JCL Collection" (PCGS Set Registry) Wispy vertical toning streaks across the center of the obverse.

2 PCGS PR68CAM PCGS PR68CAM

“The Western Hills Collection,” Heritage Auctions, June 2, 2005, Lot 5443 – $9,775; “The David R. Poole Registry Collection of Proof Three Cent Nickels,” Heritage Auctions, January 5, 2006, Lot 3103 – $6,900; Heritage Auctions, July 7, 2006, Lot 311 – $5,462.50; Marketed by Legend Numismatics in the January 2009 issue of Coin World for $10,500; Legend Rare Coin Auctions, October 15, 2015, Lot 221 – $5,757.50; Legend Rare Coin Auctions, February 2017, Lot 13 – $7,250. JD-1. Filled 2. Streaky golden toning on both sides. Thin diagonal cut a little past halfway down the first column. Not the Scher coin.

2 PCGS PR68CAM

Heritage Auctions, July 7, 2006, Lot 312 – $9,487.50.

PCGS PR68+CAM #1 PCGS PR68+CAM

Legend Rare Coin Auctions, March 26, 2020, Lot 190 – Passed; Dell Loy Hansen; "The D.L. Hansen U.S. Coin Design Set (1792-Present)" (PCGS Set Registry).

PCGS PR68CAM #2 PCGS PR68CAM

Stack's Bowers, March 25, 2020, Lot 1129 - $3,600; "The KCV Nickels Type Set" (PCGS Set Registry).

#2 PCGS PR68CAM

Bruce Scher; R. Iskowitz; "The Carnton Collection, Part II," Heritage Auctions, November 2, 2017, Lot 16650 – $6,900. "The JCL Collection" (PCGS Set Registry) Wispy vertical toning streaks across the center of the obverse.

PCGS PR68CAM #2 PCGS PR68CAM

“The Western Hills Collection,” Heritage Auctions, June 2, 2005, Lot 5443 – $9,775; “The David R. Poole Registry Collection of Proof Three Cent Nickels,” Heritage Auctions, January 5, 2006, Lot 3103 – $6,900; Heritage Auctions, July 7, 2006, Lot 311 – $5,462.50; Marketed by Legend Numismatics in the January 2009 issue of Coin World for $10,500; Legend Rare Coin Auctions, October 15, 2015, Lot 221 – $5,757.50; Legend Rare Coin Auctions, February 2017, Lot 13 – $7,250. JD-1. Filled 2. Streaky golden toning on both sides. Thin diagonal cut a little past halfway down the first column. Not the Scher coin.

#2 PCGS PR68CAM

Heritage Auctions, July 7, 2006, Lot 312 – $9,487.50.