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Gold Eagles

1907 Liberty $10 1907 $10 Liberty NGC MS60 CAC GOLD
Please call: 1-800-388-8118
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1907 $10 Liberty
NGC MS60 CAC GOLD
Coin ID: RC3913008
Inquire Price: P.O.R - - SOLD - 7/21/2014*
Free Shipping and Insurance for coins at $10K or above.
1907 Eagle Liberty - 1907 $10 Liberty NGC MS60 CAC GOLD. Tied for second finest at CAC, this wonderful, Mint State 1907 Liberty Head Eagle shows muted original mint luster within its devices. Its light and dark gold surfaces indicate the coins originality. The surfaces are extremely clean for the grade with no notable abrasion marks or other distractions. The strike is excellent with full details on the centers of the stars, the high points of Libertys hair, the eagles neck, and the area to the lower left of the shield. The CAC gold sticker indicates that the coin is a premium quality piece that exceeds the indicated grades requirements.
 
The 1907 Liberty Head eagle was the first coin struck in the transitional year between the old type and the new Indian Head eagle. As the last year of the design, has always been prized by collectors.
 
The Liberty Head eagle was designed by Christian Gobrecht. It shows Liberty facing left in profile wearing a LIBERTY inscribed coronet with her hair tied in the back in beads. Two long curls hang down her neck, one in the back and the other on the side. She is surrounded with thirteen six-pointed stars. The date is below the truncation, which shows no drapery. The motif is taken from a Benjamin West painting of Venus. It was also used with modifications for the Large Cents of 1839. The reverse shows a heraldic eagle with outstretched wing looking to the left. On its chest is the Union shield. In its talons it holds the olive branch and arrows. The error in the previous issue, Scots eagle held the arrows and the olive branches in the wrong talons, is corrected. Except for being interrupted by the tips of the eagles wings UNITED STATES OF AMERICA surrounds the reverse, separated from the denomination TEN D. by dots. Dentils are near the edge on both sides of the coin, and the edge is reeded.
The Type 2 Liberty Head eagle, Motto Added was created when the motto IN GOD WE TRUST was added to a banner designed by James B. Longacre above the eagle in 1866. The change was made in response to pressure organized by the Reverend M.R. Watkinson. The motto remained until 1907, when President Theodore Roosevelt told Augustus Saint-Gaudens to omit it on the newly designed Indian Head eagle.

Gobrecht became the third Chief Engraver at the United States Mint. He was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania in 1785. His father was a German immigrant, and his mother traced her ancestry to the early settlers of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Gobrecht married Mary Hewes in 1818. One of his early positions was as an engraver of clocks in Baltimore. Later he went to Philadelphia where he became a banknote engraver. He invented a machine that allowed one to convert a three-dimensional medal into an illustration. In 1826 Gobrecht did his first work for the Mint as an assistant to William Kneass. After Kneass suffered a debilitating stroke, Gobrecht did all the die and pattern work for the Mint. He became Chief Engraver in 1840 and served until his death in 1844. He was famous for his Liberty Seated motif, which was used for all denominations of silver coinage including the half-dime, dime, quarter dollar, half dollar and silver dollar. He also designed the Liberty Head gold eagle, a motif that was also used on the half-cent, the cent, the gold quarter eagle, and the gold half eagle. 

In 1844 Longacre was appointed Mint Engraver through the influence of Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. After overcoming opposition by the Chief Coiner, Franklin Peale, who was fearful that the new Engraver would interfere with his illegal medal manufacturing business using the Mint facilities, Longacre did well. He was responsible for creating many new designs including the Indian Head cent, the two-cent piece, the Shield nickel, the Liberty Head gold dollar, the Indian Princess gold dollar, the three-dollar gold piece, and the Liberty Head double eagle. 

In its population report, as of December 2013, CAC shows 2 Liberty Head 1907 eagles confirmed with gold stickers at the MS60 grade level with just 1 finer. Less than a fraction of 1% of all 1907 Liberty Head eagles certified by NGC and PCGS have been given CAC gold stickers.

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