1836 $1 J-60, Gobrecht Original PR62 认证号12438407, PCGS号11225

拥有者评论

PQ! Original, Coin Alignment. Silver. Plain Edge. Die Alignment I (head of Liberty opposite the DO in DOLLAR). In addition to the artistic depiction of Liberty and the natural appearance of the eagle, one of the most distinctive elements of this 1836 Gobrecht dollar is the flight of the eagle upward at a sharp angle. Mint Director Robert Maskell Patterson carefully communicated what he wanted to artist Titian Peale by specifying that the eagle fly "onward and upward." To Patterson the positioning of the eagle was symbolic of the young republic. During the two striking periods in December 1836, the eagle maintained its upward angle of flight. The difference between the two December striking periods is the presence of a scratch above the eagle's wing, pointing toward the AT of STATES, that appeared on the die before the second batch of 600 coins was struck late in that month. A coin in Die Alignment I which lacks that die scratch is from the first striking period, a batch of 400 coins. The third striking period, in March 1837, was a batch of 600 coins dated 1836. They are commonly described as having been struck with a medal alignment (or medal "turn"), rather than a coin alignment (or coin turn). The third striking period began as expected, however, the reverse die slowly rotated from the "onward and upward" position to eventually level. A few coins have even been observed with the eagle's head slightly below a level horizontal plane. Coins from the first striking period are found in high grade more often than those from late December, as many were saved as souvenirs. That statement must, of course, be understood in the general context of coins that were struck and the low percentage of coins that were actually saved from the 1830s. In December 1839 a mere 300 additional original Gobrecht dollars, dated 1839, were struck. These were given a reeded edge and a medal turn, and they also were released into circulation. The head of Liberty is opposite the O in OF in the reverse legend, which defines what is known as Die Alignment IV (i.e., eagle flying almost level after a rotation around the coin's vertical axis, or "medal turn"). If the reverse displays no die evidence of a die crack through AMERI that means it's an original 1839 dollar, according to the Gray-Carboneau classification. Today most 1839 dollars seen are restrikes from the late 1850s and 1860s.
PCGS #
11225
设计师
Christian Gobrecht
边缘
Reeded
直径
39.00 毫米
重量
26.73 克
铸币数量
1000
金属成分
90% Silver, 10% Copper
更高评级数量
40
评级较低的钱币数量
261
地区
The United States of America
价格指南
PCGS 数量报告
拍卖 - PCGS 评级的
拍卖 - NGC 评级的

稀有性和存量估计 了解更多

评级
所有评级 500 R-6.0 2 / 2 27 / 38 TIE
60或以上 125 R-7.7 2 / 2 22 / 38
65或以上 5 R-9.7 2 / 2 19 / 38 TIE
所有评级 500
60或以上 125
65或以上 5
所有评级 R-6.0
60或以上 R-7.7
65或以上 R-9.7
所有评级 2 / 2
60或以上 2 / 2
65或以上 2 / 2
所有评级 27 / 38 TIE
60或以上 22 / 38
65或以上 19 / 38 TIE

状况普查 了解更多

位置 评级 缩略图 家谱和历史
1 PR64 PCGS grade PR64 PCGS grade

Lawrence Stack type set, sold intact in 1/2003 - D. Brent Pogue Collection - Stack's/Bowers & Sotheby's 5/2016:4021, $82,250

1 PR64 PCGS grade  
	PCGS #11225 (PR) 64

TradeDollarNut Collection - Simpson Collection

1 PR64 PCGS grade PR64 PCGS grade
1 PR64 PCGS grade PR64 PCGS grade
1 PR64 PCGS grade PR64 PCGS grade

High Desert Collection (PCGS Set Registry)

PR64 PCGS grade #1 PR64 PCGS grade

Lawrence Stack type set, sold intact in 1/2003 - D. Brent Pogue Collection - Stack's/Bowers & Sotheby's 5/2016:4021, $82,250

 
	PCGS #11225 (PR) 64 
#1 PR64 PCGS grade

TradeDollarNut Collection - Simpson Collection

PR64 PCGS grade #1 PR64 PCGS grade
PR64 PCGS grade #1 PR64 PCGS grade
PR64 PCGS grade #1 PR64 PCGS grade

High Desert Collection (PCGS Set Registry)