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Centennial Gold and Silver Coins
Aharon's Jewish Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
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from 9 am to 6 pm

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The United States
twenty cent coin (often called a twenty cent piece)
was a unit of currency equalling 1/5th of a United
States dollar. Its purchasing power in 1875 would be
equivalent to $3.96 today.
The twenty cent coin had one of the shortest
mintages and lowest circulations in US coin history,
for both the series and the denomination. It was
minted from 1875-1878, but was only released for
circulation in 1875 and 1876, with only a few
hundred proofs released during the remaining two
years.
It also has the distinction of being one of the few
coins minted in the short lived Carson City Mint
branch of the United States Mint in Carson City,
Nevada (which only operated from 1870-1893).
Nearly 1,355,000 were produced in total, with over
1.1 million of those being the 1875-S. Some 10,000
of the 1876-CC were minted, but most were melted
down at the US Mint before ever being released, and
now only an estimated 12-20 are thought to exist.
The U.S. twenty-cent piece was created at the urging
of Senator John Percival Jones from Nevada. Jones
represented the silver miners of the Comstock Lode.
The coin was invented as a tactic for increasing
U.S. silver exports. It was meant to circulate on a
par with the silver franc, a widely used
international reserve currency of the 1870s. The
French-franc heritage survives in Europe to this
day; most European countries which eventually
adopted decimal formats preferred the 20/100
denomination over the 25/100, and today's Euro
coinage includes a 20-cent piece, not a 25-cent
piece. The Province of Canada also issued 20-cent
coins in 1858 for the same reason; after
Confederation, Canada abandoned the innovation in
favor of 25-cent coins, first struck in 1870.
Newfoundland, which did not join Canada until 1949,
issued 20-cent coins from 1865 until 1912.
There were several valid reasons for the speedy
withdrawal of the 20-cent piece from general
circulation in the United States. Foremost, it was
easily confused with the quarters of the era, having
the same Liberty Seated design on the front, and a
similar eagle design on the back, as well as the
same metallic composition and a similar size. One
would basically have had to read the small, easily
worn text on the reverse in order to determine the
value (TWENTY CENTS vs QUAR. DOL.) without a side by
side comparison. Another difference was that the
20-cent coins had a smooth edge while the other
silver denominations featured a reeded, or milled,
edge. A third difference — chiefly noted today by
collectors as an aid in determining the coins'
numismatic value — is that the word "LIBERTY" on the
twenty-cent piece's obverse shield was raised; the
word wore smooth more quickly than it did on the
other Liberty Seated coins.
For these reasons, the U.S. twenty-cent piece
quickly failed to gain acceptance, and its mintage
for general circulation ceased only two years after
it began.
Mintage Figures
* 1875 P - 37,000
* 1875 S - 1,155,000
* 1875 CC - 133,290
* 1876 P - 14,640
* 1876 CC - 10,000
* 1877 P - 350 (all proof)
* 1878 P - 600 (all proof)
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