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Centennial Gold and Silver Coins
Aharon's Jewish Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
Open
Monday - Thursday from 9 am to 6 pm
Friday and Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm
Call anytime - leave a message: 303-835-8892
The
1804 dollar
The 1804 silver dollar is one of the rarest and most famous coins
in the world. Its creation was the result of a simple bookkeeping
error, but its status as the king of coins has been established
for nearly a century and a half. The silver
dollars
reported by the mint as being struck in 1804 were actually dated
1803 (die steel being very expensive in the early 1800s, dies were
used until they were no longer in working condition. This is why
many early US coins exhibit all kinds of die cracks, occlusions,
cuds, clash marks, and other late state die wear. Dies were used
until they literally fell apart. Nearly every coin the US struck
from 1793 to 1825 has an example that was struck in a year other
than that which it bears.) No dollars bearing the date 1804 were
ever struck in 1804, though this was unknown to mint officials at
the time the 1804 dollar came to be.
The 1804 silver dollar was actually produced in 1834, when the U.S.
Department of State decided to produce a set of U.S. coins to be
used as gifts to rulers in Asia in exchange for trade advantages.
Since 1804 was the last recorded year of mintage for both the dollar
and $10
Eagle, it was decided that the set would contain examples of
those coins dated 1804, as well as the other denominations currently
being produced. Mint officials, not realizing that the 19,000+ dollars
recorded as being produced in 1804 were all dated 1803, proceeded
to make new dies dated 1804. Little did they know the stunning rarity
they were creating. Only 15 silver
dollars with the date of 1804 are known to exist; in 1999, one
of them sold at auction for more than $4 million. There are 8 Class
I dollars, struck in 1834 for the aforementioned sets, 1 Class II
dollar, struck over an 1857 Swiss Shooting Thaler (and now residing
in the US Coin Collection at the Smithsonian Institution), and 6
Class III dollars, struck surreptitiously sometime between 1858
and 1860 to meet collector demand for the coin. |