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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 Trade VF25 PCGS #7032

Type 1/1- Wide CC 1.2mm, Rare coin that is part of a 3 coin subset that had an unique Rev Die used in 1873,74 and 76. All 3 dates are rare with the 74 being the hardest to locate followed by the 73 and then the still rare 76. This coin is a perfect mid range cir that is CAC approved.

1873-CC T$1 Trade VF25 PCGS #7032

Type 1/1- Wide CC 1.2mm, Rare coin that is part of a 3 coin subset that had an unique Rev Die used in 1873,74 and 76. All 3 dates are rare with the 74 being the hardest to locate followed by the 73 and then the still rare 76. This coin is a perfect mid range cir that is CAC approved.

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-S T$1 MS61 PCGS #7036

Type 1/1- Super pleasing UNC with strong luster under dusty molted tone as one would expect for the age. The 74-s is a slightly better overall and a condition scarcity in UNC ranging to an extreme rarity in Gem. Despite this it is often priced at type and offers an opportunity for collectors.

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 Type II/II MS61 PCGS #510103

Type 2/2 - Ex Concord Collection - The unquestioned centerpiece of my collection being one of the 2 main (if not the) Keys to a Hub type Trade Dollar. Understated true rarity of around just a few dozen business strike coins known and not more than 4-5 UNC's. This coin is clearly not a proof with what I would call a C- Circulation quality strike and does not display the common signs of being struck multiple times. Also many of the crevices that would show mirrors if struck on a polished planchet are not PL such as the spaces in between the ropes and the hay bails, low points of feathers and the eagles neck line. The coin does have PL fields and amazing natural toning with blues and fire reds through out most likely from spending the 90's in an old no-line NGC fatty. This coin is one of the finest know and "all there", I will provide it a good home till the next generation of collectors come along.

1876 T$1 Type II/II MS61 PCGS #510103

Type 2/2 - Ex Concord Collection - The unquestioned centerpiece of my collection being one of the 2 main (if not the) Keys to a Hub type Trade Dollar. Understated true rarity of around just a few dozen business strike coins known and not more than 4-5 UNC's. This coin is clearly not a proof with what I would call a C- Circulation quality strike and does not display the common signs of being struck multiple times. Also many of the crevices that would show mirrors if struck on a polished planchet are not PL such as the spaces in between the ropes and the hay bails, low points of feathers and the eagles neck line. The coin does have PL fields and amazing natural toning with blues and fire reds through out most likely from spending the 90's in an old no-line NGC fatty. This coin is one of the finest know and "all there", I will provide it a good home till the next generation of collectors come along.

1876-CC T$1 Type-I/I VF25 PCGS #40112

Type 1/1- CAC and rarest of the 76cc die pairs and hub types. This was a left over 75cc rev die that saw limited use. Passed down from the Blackhawk collection and a coin I looked for for a very long time.

1876-CC T$1 Type-I/I VF25 PCGS #40112

Type 1/1- CAC and rarest of the 76cc die pairs and hub types. This was a left over 75cc rev die that saw limited use. Passed down from the Blackhawk collection and a coin I looked for for a very long time.

1876-CC T$1 Doubled Die Reverse AU53 PCGS #97042

Type 1/1- DDR and a PL early die state. Nice Coin

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 T$1 FS-101, C-13 DDO VF35 PCGS #145696

Type 2/2 - DDO, FS-101. I have it at the XF40 level but a nice original coin with the rare Doubled die.

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.

1877-S T$1 FS-301, C-21 RPD & RPM AU58 PCGS #145812

Type 2/2- RPD FS-301. Rare RPD that is one of the strongest in the series. Crossed from a ICG58 holder. Little higher than my grade but 2 out of 3 can't be wrong ;)

1877-S T$1 FS-301, C-21 RPD & RPM AU58 PCGS #145812

Type 2/2- RPD FS-301. Rare RPD that is one of the strongest in the series. Crossed from a ICG58 holder. Little higher than my grade but 2 out of 3 can't be wrong ;)

1877-S T$1 FS-802 DDR AU55 PCGS #145810

Type 2/2-DDR FS-802 or 2nd Die, Great toner on a scarce coin. Crossed from old ANACS AU55

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 FS-801 DDR MS61 PCGS #145808

Type 2/2-DDR Late die state with a large die chip in the right wing and even though it has nice PL surfaces with some field depth in spots, the die was probably polished after a striking event as I know of MDS that are full chartwheel. No individual mark accounts for the low grade although its looks to have had a bath X number of years ago which might have knocked it down from a 62 due to the eye factor(or up from 58). 3rd or 4th biggest spread in the trade series and a scarce coin esp in mint state. Cool Rev mounted slab