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1873 T$1 Trade AU53 PCGS #7031

Type 1/1- Choice original Seated Trade Dollar and 1st year of issue on a classic series that America introduced as a way to export more silver so not to crash and flood its markets as silver stated pouring out of the west with the establishing of major mines such as the Comstock.

1873 T$1 Trade AU53 PCGS #7031

Type 1/1- Choice original Seated Trade Dollar and 1st year of issue on a classic series that America introduced as a way to export more silver so not to crash and flood its markets as silver stated pouring out of the west with the establishing of major mines such as the Comstock.

1873-CC T$1 MPD FS-301 XF40 PCGS #145814

Type 1/1- MPD FS-301 top of 7 poking out of the denticals. Nice original con that is known with two different Rev mint mark size variants. NGC called it a 45 but PCGS is right with the 40 grade.

1873-S T$1 Trade AU55 PCGS #7033

Type 1/1 - one of the hardest date MM combos to track down for some reason at least for me.

1873-S T$1 Trade AU55 PCGS #7033

Type 1/1 - one of the hardest date MM combos to track down for some reason at least for me.

1874 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7034

Type 1/1- A choicely original AU that is a perfect coin for my set and an underrated early P Trade 1$ that compares to the 75p Key-date in terms of POPs but not price. I got the coin raw off Ebay for less than 60% of retail but those days seem to be coming to an end.

1874-CC T$1 XF45 PCGS #7035

Type 1/1- Wide CC Mint Mark (1.2 mm spaced) . This Rev die was used on the 73, 74 & 76 years that I know about and is often weekly struck on the eagles leg on the 74. All coins with this Mint Marks characteristic spacing are very rare with this date being the rarest of the 3. Of note there is a similar mint mark of 1.0 mm spacing and location on the 1873 & 1874 date although they are not as quite as rare. Nice original coin with some luster still showing. The 74cc is a little scarcer in un-chopped marked condition then most people think as most of the coins were shipped over seas. This is a very PQ and underrated coin and one of my best Trade $s.

1874-S T$1 VF35 PCGS #7036

Type 1/1 - avg cir bought off of my buddy DDR to fill in my Everyman set. My Showcase has a choice MS61 for the example.

1875 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7037

Type 1/2- CAC stickered LDS with the concentric die cracks on the Rev. Choice AU of this rare Key date that is almost never found in PCGS plastic.

1875-CC T$1 AU53 PCGS #7038

Type 1/1- Choice original AU with glowing luster under dusty skin. Most common of the CC Trades but rare this nice in the perfect economy collector grade.

1875-CC T$1 AU53 PCGS #7038

Type 1/1- Choice original AU with glowing luster under dusty skin. Most common of the CC Trades but rare this nice in the perfect economy collector grade.

1875-S T$1 AU58 PCGS #7039

Type 1/1- Nice original example with ample luster the most common Type one Trade dollars. Perfect example of how the pops for Trade dollars are slightly misleading. It show 31 in AU50 but out of those I would guess that 22 are Type 1/1, 7 or 8 are type 1/2 large S and 1 or 2 are the Type 1/2 Micro s.

1875-S/CC T$1 FS-501 OMM AU58 PCGS #145813

Type 1/1- 1875 S/CC FS-501 LDS with extensive cracking on the Rev with a clear bold C. The Top Variety in the series that crosses over into mainstream collecting due to its bold clear C remnants of a CC on the die that was originally intended for Carson City. One of 2 known repurposed dies for the year and the more obvious of the 2. This one is a very high end coin that is close to a true UNC IMO and one of the few I have seen with much eye appeal and a Bold C. Counter to logic the EDS (without cracks)can come with very faint under details and range from invisible to thin and low relief. Cracked out of an NGC 61 holder as the picture shows.

1875-S/CC T$1 FS-501 OMM AU58 PCGS #145813

Type 1/1- 1875 S/CC FS-501 LDS with extensive cracking on the Rev with a clear bold C. The Top Variety in the series that crosses over into mainstream collecting due to its bold clear C remnants of a CC on the die that was originally intended for Carson City. One of 2 known repurposed dies for the year and the more obvious of the 2. This one is a very high end coin that is close to a true UNC IMO and one of the few I have seen with much eye appeal and a Bold C. Counter to logic the EDS (without cracks)can come with very faint under details and range from invisible to thin and low relief. Cracked out of an NGC 61 holder as the picture shows.

1876 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7041

Type 1/2 - Most common of the 76p's. Choice original coin with cool concentric die cracks on the Lower Rev. Nicely PL with the rounded rims and the Rev die cracks giving away its business strike origins. Nice toning.

1876-CC T$1 AU55 PCGS #7042

Type 1/2- Most common of the 3 main 76cc's you will come across at an almost 75% rate, although the 76cc is a scarce date to start with it becomes conditionally rare in the choice AU and greater range. This coin is a total package of originality /luster pop / and preservation with a correct grade of 53. Most coins of this issue even in TPG's slabs are not working with their original skin. Perfect

1876-S T$1 Type-I/II AU55 PCGS #40115

Type 1/2- Micro S, Most common of the hub type mint mark types but proved surprisingly hard to find in attractive AU. Saw a few dipped out sliders in UNC holders but held out of this one. Former Old ANACS 55

1876-S T$1 Type-I/II AU55 PCGS #40115

Type 1/2- Micro S, Most common of the hub type mint mark types but proved surprisingly hard to find in attractive AU. Saw a few dipped out sliders in UNC holders but held out of this one. Former Old ANACS 55

1877 T$1 AU55 PCGS #7044

Type 2/2- As is the norm for 77p's it has Flat stars but a surprisingly full head and the rest of the coin is hammered. This coin is a slider and is one of my nicest preserved Trade Dollars and is just dripping with a semi PL luster with golden Tone, I would balk at AU58 too as the coin is every bit as MS61 as my 78s. Perfect and very high quality.

1877-CC T$1 AU55 PCGS #7045

Type 2/2- A nice example of this popular CC issue that is an understated rarity. While it gets over shadowed by the 78cc the Pops are almost the same.

1877-S T$1 AU55 PCGS #7046

Type 2/2 - Scarce Broken Arrows variety noted by the die damage on the Rev. It should be noted that the 78s DDR is either this Rev die that was rehubbed to correct the damage or for a die that came from a hub that had this error and then rehubbed again to correct the arrows. Flashy coin that is net graded for the splotchy tone.

1878-CC T$1 Trade XF40 PCGS #7047

Type 2/2-Completely under graded keydate. Detail of 50-53 w/ luster of 45-50. Traces of old proof like flash. One of the nicest Cir 78's I have seen outside of a few high end AU's. Perfect The allure of the 1878cc Trade dollar that helps it cross into mainstream collectors--- Made rare by decree: Secretary of the Treasury John Sherman, who disliked trade dollars intensely (even though the director of the Mint, Dr. Henry Linderman, believed they were an excellent, useful coin), mandated on February 22, 1878, that no trade dollars would be paid our for deposits of bullion made prior to the order for discontinuance when received at Carson City. When this order reached Carson City, this branch mint had already struck 97,000 pieces; 56,000 in January and 41,000 in February—the smallest business strike quantity of the denomination. Thus, a rarity was created. Melting: On July 19, 1878, 44,148 undistributed trade dollars went to the melting pot. Most must have been dated 1878-CC, many from the 41,000 delivered in February. This leaves a net mintage for distribution of only 52,852 coins. Although it is possible that some were dated 1877cc

1878-S T$1 Trade AU55 PCGS #7048

Type 2/2 - Non-DDR and a nice type coin that is hard to find attractive with high luster. Almost as nice as my MS61 and sits in an older blue holder that had its label flipped before printing.