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Quarter Eagles

1903 $2.50 NGC PF64 CAC
Please call: 1-941-291-2156
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1903 $2.50
NGC PF64 CAC
Coin ID: RC3076002
Inquire Price: 7,600.00 - SOLD - 3/21/2011*
Free Shipping and Insurance for coins at $10K or above.

1903 $2.50 (1903 Quarter Eagle) NGC PF64 CAC. This almost cameo proof 1903 Quarter Eagle shimmers with bright mint luster on the devices. A few small marks on Libertys cheek keep it from a higher mint state grade, which is confirmed by CAC. As expected for a proof coin, the strike is full and sharp on both sides. There is strike doubling on the reverse on STATES OF AMERICA and the top of the eagle. Christian Gobrechts quarter eagle was produced without substantial modification from 1840 to 1907, the longest span in any United States coinage series. It uses the Coronet design which shows Liberty facing left, her hair tied tightly in beads, except for two curls one down the back of her neck and the other on the side below her ear, with LIBERTY inscribed on the coronet. She is surrounded by thirteen stars, and the date is below the truncation. The reverse shows the heraldic eagle facing left holding arrows and olive branch it its talons. The inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA arcs around it, interrupted by the wing tips, and the denomination 2 D. is below. The denomination is separated from the legend with dots. The weight remained the same, but the diameter was reduced from the previous issue to 18 millimeters.

The coinage act of 1865 specified that motto IN GOD WE TRUST should be added to all coins large enough to accommodate it. The Mint interpreted this law to mean that the motto had to be added to silver coins larger than the dime and gold half eagles, eagles and double eagles. Because of its size, the quarter eagle was exempt.

Christian Gobrecht was the third Chief Engraver at Mint in Philadelphia. He was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania in 1785. His father, a German immigrant was a reverend. His mother, Elizabeth Sands was a descendent of the early settlers of Plymouth Colony. In 1818 Gobrecht married Mary Hewes. After an apprenticeship, he became an engraver of clockworks in Baltimore. Later, in Philadelphia, he joined a banknote engraving firm where he had an excellent job. Understandably, Gobrecht was reluctant to join the Mint staff. In order to persuade him to leave the engraving firm, Mint Director Patterson convinced Chief Engraver William Kneass, incapacitated by a stroke, to give up a significant part of his salary so more money would be available to hire the new employee. Gobrechts first work for the United States Mint was in 1826 when he made dies as an assistant to Kneass. When Kneass was unable to continue working because of the stroke, Gobrecht did all the die and pattern work. He was Chief Engraver from 1840 until his death in 1844.

The 1903 quarter eagle had an original mintage of 197 so it is rare in all conditions. In its population report, NGC shows 3 in PF64 with 4 better. CAC lists 1 with 4 better.


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