Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

1874-CC $1 Trade Silver Dollar PCGS MS64+ (CAC)

SOLD
SKU
39836452

Out of its original mintage of 1,373,200, a mere 570 have been graded by PCGS. Of those, 4 hold the premium grade of MS64+, with 5 finer (as of 4/2021). This is a registry coin and great conditional rarity from the famed Carson City mint of the Wild West. Plus the coveted green CAC sticker provides evidence that this piece is of superior quality for its grade. This is a rare, low pop example, ready to be counted among the most important collections of U.S. silver dollars--or within a type set of equally rare specimens of different series from America's storied past. The discerning collector will be proud to own this dramatic example of one of the finest Trade dollars available, a coin that will definitely set you apart from the numismatic crowd.    

GET A QUOTE ON SIMILAR (THIS ITEM HAS SOLD)

1874-CC $1 Trade Silver Dollar PCGS MS64+ (CAC)--$27,500.00 "Rare Type Coin" "Registry" "Carson City mint" "Conditional Rarity"

      We at AUCM are proud to offer a rare Mint State survivor of an 1874-CC Trade dollar, a dramatic type coin from the Wild West Carson City mint. Trade dollars were produced from 1873-1877 in mint state and proof, while only proofs were minted from 1878-1883. Until 1876, they were legal tender in the United States, even though their main purpose was for commerce in China and throughout East Asia. That is why many circulated examples of Trade dollars feature chop marks upon them. The vast majority of Trade dollars produced at the Carson City mint, including those of 1874, were put on ships in San Francisco and sent off to the Orient. Those coins were used in commerce, and were still being found there in the 1940s, however the vast majority of them were melted in China and India.

      The Trade dollar was designed by U.S. Mint chief engraver William Barber. Numismatic art critic and scholar Cornelius Vermeule writes of it, "The design is a kind of glorification of all neo-Roman symbolism popular on U.S. coins in the 19th century." He quotes a "no-nonsense" report from 1873 that describes the obverse: "A female figure [is] seated on bales of merchandise, holding in her left hand a scroll bearing the word 'Liberty.' At her back is a sheaf of wheat, expressing, with the bales of goods, the commercial character of the coin: her right hand extended holds the olive branch." Vermeule continues his critique: "Peace and commerce are dispatched from the United States over the seas, for this Juno sits on a grassy plinth, inscribed with IN GOD WE TRUST and set beside the waves. A particularly satisfying eagle graces the reverse, small yet bold and a happy compromise between heraldry and concessions to feathery nature. The plethora of titles, mottoes, and inscribed statistics somehow does not seem out of place on either obverse or reverse."

More Information
PCGS # 7035
Grading Service NONE
Year of Issue NONE
Grade NONE
Denom Type N/A
Numeric Denomination Trade $1
Mint Location NONE
Designation NONE
Circ/UnCirc Not Specified
Strike Type N/A
Grade Add On NONE
Holder Type N/A

© AU Capital Management, LLC | Site by Digital Studio NW