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首席收藏网 > 数据中心 > Stack's Bowers and Ponterio > SBP2018年3月巴尔地摩#2-美国钱币Vanderbilt集藏

Lot:10321 1874 Three-Dollar Gold Piece. MS-64 (PCGS). CAC. OGH.

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外国钱币

USD 4500

SBP2018年3月巴尔地摩#2-美国钱币Vanderbilt集藏

2018-03-23 00:00:00

2018-03-23 05:00:00

USD 11400

SBP

成交

1874 Three-Dollar Gold Piece. MS-64 (PCGS). CAC. OGH.,The beautiful golden-orange surfaces of this 1874 $3 gold piece are adorned with full satiny luster. This is a sharply defined circulation strike example with virtually all design elements fully rendered and crisp. Carefully preserved and solidly in the Choice category, this premium quality example comes highly recommended for inclusion in a Mint State gold type set.<p>Among the many provisions of the Act of February 12, 1873, was the requirement to "renovate" the nations gold coins with regard to pieces that had lost some of their value due to wear. In the <em>Annual Report of the Director of the Mint</em> for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1874, Mint Director James Pollock commented:<p><em>"It seems a remarkable omission in our laws, that there is no limit at which our coins shall cease to be legal tender on account of wear. In England, the sovereign, or pound sterling, is not legally current when it has lost more than half a grain....It has not been a serious trouble in this country from the fact that our coin is so apt to be exported. And yet it makes difficulty at the Customs Houses and national treasuries, as we have had occasion to know. The collectors and treasurers hardly know what they are to do when coins much abraded are offered to them. In some sections where gold is much used, as on the Pacific Coast and in the extreme southwest, the wear is very marked."</em><p>The relevant provisions in the Act of 1873, however, gave Pollock some hope in the governments ability to rectify this situation. By its accounts, the Mint destroyed $32,717,185.50 in worn gold coins, mostly from Treasury Department stocks. These coins had sustained a loss in value of $193,568.90, or 0.017% of face value, and their destruction prompted Pollock to write: "The renovation of the gold coins is now about complete, except as to the light or worn pieces in circulation in the Pacific Coast states and territories; and if some provision were made for their withdrawal, the entire gold coinage would then be in good condition." Bullion recovered from the melted pieces was recoined into new gold issues.<p>Todays gold type collectors can certainly be thankful for this chain of events, since this recoinage of melted pieces resulted in an unusually high mintage of 41,800 circulation strikes for the 1874 three-dollar gold piece. The 1874 now numbers among the more available issues in a series replete with rarities. Even so, the 1874 must be regarded as a scarce coin in lower Mint State grades relative to market demand. Choice examples in MS-64, as here, are rare and represent the finest realistically obtainable for most collectors.,From the A.J. Vanderbilt Collection. Acquired from Stacks, June 1993.,

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