Home
Newsletter
About Us
Coins For Sale
Selling Your Coins
Rare Coin Archives
Coin Collecting
Investing in Coins
Coin Information
Coin Articles
/World Coins
Books, Loupes etc.
Link to Us
Links
Contact Us
   
  Search 
  Sign up for our free NewsLetter
  e-mail: 
  Sign Up 
 


 

 

 



 







Civil War Coins

1862-S $10 1862-S $10 NGC AU55 CAC
Please call: 1-800-388-8118
VIEW LARGER IMAGE
1862-S $10
NGC AU55 CAC
Coin ID: RC36001
Inquire Price: P.O.R - - SOLD - 5/15/2010*
Free Shipping and Insurance for coins at $10K or above.

1862 Eagle (1862 $10) NGC AU55 CAC. Civil War Date Eagle. The featured coin, an 1862-S $10 Eagle, was produced at the San Francisco Mint from 1854-1866. This coin is graded AU55 by NGC and the grade is verified by the Certified Acceptance Corporation (CAC). CAC population reports show that this coin is the only coin verified at the AU-55 grade with none higher! The coin exhibits lustrous honey gold surfaces with minimal contact marks and light areas of wear. Sharply struck devices also complement this coin.

As a result of the Reign of Terror in France in 1793, gold prices rose worldwide. The fluctuating gold prices adversely affected United States coinage, which was statutorily bound to the weight specifications of a 15 to 1 silver/gold ratio defined by the Mint Act of 1792. The fluctuating price of precious metals wreaked havoc all over, particularly with the largest gold coin, the flagship $10 Capped Bust "Eagle." By 1795, an ounce of gold in the United States was worth 15 ounces of silver, and in Paris, an ounce of gold became worth 15.5 ounces of silver. Bullion dealers jumped on the chance to make a quick buck, and many people bought United States gold coins, mostly with Latin American silver coins, and shipped them to Paris to be sold. By 1813, the ratio would reach 16.25:1, and before long, 98% of all U.S. gold coinage would be destroyed. At the end of 1804, President Thomas Jefferson ordered eagle production stopped. It would be thirty-four years before production resumed.

As the first Secretary of Treasury of the United States , Alexander Hamilton had envisioned a monetary standard where gold would be the only legal tender, and coins of other metals would be simply a convenience. He believed that golds price stability was the most consistent of all of the precious metals and be less sensitive to changes in supply. Many considered his idea to be utopian and idealistic and in 1790, Congress settled on a bimetallic standard. Mint Director Robert M. Patterson was instructed to produce $10 gold eagles, and Acting Engraver Christian Gobrecht, replacing the ailing William Kneass, prepared dies for a new design.

Gobrechts design for the Liberty Head $10 gold piece was inspired by the portrait of Venus in Benjamin West's Painting Omnia Vincit Amor (Love Conquers All). The obverse features a bust of Liberty facing left, wearing a coronet inscribed LIBERTY . Her hair is knotted in the back with hanging curls. Thirteen stars encircle the bust, with the date positioned below. The reverse depicts an eagle holding an olive branch and arrows, surrounded by the inscriptions UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and TEN D. Mintmarks are below the eagle.


We are interested in buying these rare coins/tokens/medals/currency. If you are interested in selling, raw or slabbed please offer to us and ask your price or once received we'll make our highest offer! Contact us here and tell us what you have to sell us.
** All buy it now coins availability must be confirmed via email or phone before purchase. Please contact us ( email ) for availability.
* Prices subject to change with no advance notice due to market or other reasons. Paypal fee may apply.

Don't see it here? Tell us what you want Click Here


BACK TO INDEX
US Rare Coin Investments © 2003 - U.S. Rare Coin Investments
TERMS  |  LEGAL  |  SITE MAP
 

Have a question? Contact us here

Have a friend who might be interested?
Inform them about us now!
Your E-mail: Your Name: Friend's E-mail: Friend's Name:
Send to a Friend