Home  Accessibility  Coins  Medallions  Medals  Tokens  Currency  Stamps  Stocks  Art  Books  Comics  Shop  Appraisals   Contact
Mintmark.com
Menu for older browsers
Home  Accessibility  Coins  Medallions  Medals  Tokens  Currency  Stamps  Stocks  Art  Books  Comics  Shop  Appraisals   Contact

Liberty Seated Dollars




Common, scarce and rare U.S. Liberty Seated (or Seated Liberty) dollars (silver dollars; 1840-73) at Mintmark.com; includes Liberty Seated, No Motto (1840-65) and Liberty Seated, With Motto IN GOD WE TRUST (1866-73) dollars.

1858 Liberty Seated Dollar
1858 Liberty Seated Dollar
No Motto
26.730 grams; .900 silver; 38.1 mm

"The Seated Liberty Dollar is a silver dollar coin issued by the United States government from 1840 to 1873. The coin is named for the obverse design which was uniform and matched the Half dime, Dime, Twenty-cent piece, Quarter, and Half dollar. Its obverse and reverse were both designed by Christian Gobrecht . . . Seated Liberty Dollars were introduced in 1840 and were minted in larger quantities than the sparsely minted Gobrecht Dollar that preceded it. The dollars were used in general circulation until 1853. In 1853, the value of the silver was more than the face value of the coin. The coin was continued to be minted mainly as a trade coin to be used in the Orient. This ended in 1870 when the price of silver lowered allowing the dollars to be placed back in normal circulation. This series boasts some spectacular rarities. Of this series, the most valuable coin is the 1870-S, with 12-15 known. However, the rarest of the series is a single known 1851-O, a coin struck under unknown and mysterious circumstances. It is not listed in the Guidebook of United States Coins, and is also unlisted in Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of US and Colonial Coins. Its value likely far exceeds that of the 1870-S, but as it has not been offered for sale publicly, nor any private sale confirmed, its value at this time is unknown. Also quite rare are the issues of 1851, 1852, 1858 (which was a proof-only restrike in the 1860's-1870's), 1871-CC, 1872-CC, and 1873-CC, all with only 50-500 pieces of each known to exist. The 1866 No Motto piece is correctly described as a fantasy piece, created in the 1870's along with the No Motto quarter and half dollar, for a favorite Mint customer. There are 2 known, and they are classified as patterns, and not regular issues nor restrikes . . ." — Seated Liberty dollar at Wikipedia. This version was edited and (or) revised by Mintmark.com.


Liberty Seated silver dollars not visible? Refresh this page.
Links to other websites or resources do not imply any endorsement by Mintmark.com of such websites or resources or the content, products or services available from such websites or resources. You acknowledge sole responsibility for and assume all risk arising from your use of any such websites or resources. For more info, please read User Agreement for Mintmark.com. Thank you.
Some auctions may include Seated Liberty halves.

Also see our selection of other U.S. coins.

Remember: Before you buy the coin, buy the book.



Follow Tom on Google Buzz! Follow us on Twitter!Sitemap
Google Buzz | Twitter | Sitemap

Bookmark and Share

Home | User Agreement | Privacy | Credits

Design by Tom Flowers. Hosted by IX Web Hosting.
Copyright © Mintmark.com. All Rights Reserved.