Home
Newsletter
About Us
Coins For Sale
Selling Your Coins
Coin Collecting
Investing in Coins
Coin Information
Coin Articles
/World Coins
Books, Loupes etc.
Link to Us
Links
Contact Us
   
  Search 
  Sign up for our free NewsLetter
  e-mail: 
  Sign Up 
 


 

 

 

Rare Coin Books
 



 







Mint Errors

1892-S S$1 Mint Error
Please call: 1-800-624-1870
PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION  |  VIEW LARGER IMAGE
1892-S S$1
AU Details
Coin ID: RC36002
Inquire
$3,350.00 - SOLD - 8/25/2010

1892-S Silver Dollar (1892-S S$1) Mint Error NGC AU Details. The pictured 1892-S Morgan dollar is encapsulated in an NGC holder as having AU details and being improperly cleaned. Do not let the fact that this coin was improperly cleaned sway your decision to purchase this coin. Both the obverse and reverse feature beautiful dark toning that makes the devices pop. A beautiful coin with a rare mint error!

In 1859, the Comstock Lode in Nevada was yielding huge quantities of silver, with ore worth $36 million being extracted annually. After several futile attempts, the silver forces in Congress led by Representative Richard Bland of Missouri finally succeeded in winning authorization for a new silver dollar when Congress passed the Bland-Allison Act on February 28, 1878. This Act required the Treasury to purchase at market levels between two million and four million troy ounces of silver bullion every month to be coined into dollars.

The first Morgan dollars were struck in 1878 and the series would last until 1921. George T. Morgan was commissioned to design the new dollar coin. Morgan's obverse features a left-facing portrait of Miss Liberty. The reverse depicts a somewhat scrawny eagle which led some to vilify the coin as a "buzzard dollar." The designer's initial M appears on both sides a first. It's on the truncation of Liberty's neck and on the ribbon's left loop on the reverse.

The 1892-S Morgan dollar for sale features a partial collar mint error. A partial collar results in a line around the outside edge of the coin but this is on an angle possibly higher on one side than the other. This can often result in a slightly higher edge on one side of the coin which may also give the impression or a double or extended rim on the coin.

* Prices subject to change with no advance notice due to market or other reasons.

Don't see it here? Tell us what you want Click Here


BACK TO INDEX
US Rare Coin Investments © 2003 - 2012 U.S. Rare Coin Investments
TERMS  |  LEGAL  |  SITE MAP
 

Have a question? Contact us here

Have a friend who might be interested?
Inform them about us now!
Your E-mail: Your Name: Friend's E-mail: Friend's Name:
Send to a Friend