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1864-S 10C MS64 PCGS #4640

The 1864-S dime comes from a mintage of 230,000 pieces, which was produced with a single die pair. Most of the mintage circulated and has been lost to attrition. In Mint State, surviving coins are rare. This Choice example displays satiny silver-gray surfaces with a hint of light golden color. All design elements are sharply brought up, and there are no singular surface abrasions.

1875-S/S 20C MPD FS-302 MS66 PCGS #145009

One of two die pairs of the 1875-S twenty cent piece that earn a place in the Cherrypickers' reference, BF-16 shows the top of a misplaced 7 in the dentils below the primary numeral. On the reverse, the mintmark is boldly repunched. This Premium Gem example is one of the two finest BF-16 coins attributed at PCGS (11/20), and it is conditionally scarce in this grade as a date representative. Only a handful of finer 1875-S twenty cent pieces are reported, all varieties included. This piece is beautifully lustrous and tinted a warm golden hue. Minor strike softness on the obverse stars and Liberty's lap is not bothersome. No major abrasions are seen.

1869-S 50C MS63 PCGS #6326

Ex Merrimack Collection.

1859-S $1 MS62 PCGS #6948

Fully white with semi reflective fields on both sides. San Francisco and the production of Silver dollars got off to a rough start in 1859. Although there seems have have been an ample supply of silver in that wild Gold Rush city, none had been coined locally into silver dollars. Limited production of dimes, quarters and half dollars had been undertaken in the late 1850s, but no silver dollars. The San Francisco Mint Superintendent Hempstead wrote to Mint Director James Ross Snowden in November if 1858 and requested dies and permission to coin silver dollars. Snowden agreed, and 10 pairs of dies were sent west. These initial San Franscico silver dollars mostly went overseas to China, where they were accepted in trade but most were melted, as the Chinese preferred the Mexican silver coins. None of these 1859-S silver dollars were hoarded and saved when they were released, hence survival is random. Mint State coins are the hardest to find, as most known examples show considerable wear from years of service in commerce. Here is one of the few that did survive with all its mint frost and luster intact. A delight for the date specialist! Only 20,000 struck. Two die varieties are identified for the 1859-S Seated Liberty silver dollar, and this is a late die state of Osborn-Cushing 1, showing a delicate die crack through the base of the date. The 1859-S had a mintage of only 20,000 coins, and survivors are elusive in all grades. Mint State pieces are especially rare. Only 46 submissions have been graded Mint State and both PCGS and NGC, 23 at each grading service, and those figures include countless resubmissions.. This lovely Mint State piece shows striking weakness at the usual locations, including the stars at the upper right obverse, the top of the left (facing) wing, and the eagle's neck. The surfaces are brilliant and untoned, with prooflike fields. This is an outstanding example for an advanced collector.

1873-S T$1 Trade MS64 PCGS #7033

Ex D.L. Hansen Collection.