I have seen all the grading services grade some chopmarked trade dollars as mint state (uncirculated). Without a chopmark, there is ambiguity as to whether the coin was circulated (for a very short time), but appears that it wasn't, so it can be graded mint state. With a chopmark, it is definatively proven that the coin has circulated (afterall, it was circulated in China to get the chop). For the life of me, I cannot understand how any chopmarked trade dollar can get a grade higher than AU-58. Does anyone else follow this logic?


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cheats. Most of the Un-chopped TD probably came at the end when the US Treasury was phasing them out and sold them under par for silver content. Stories of "CFO"s in those days buying them at discount and putting them into pay envelopes rather than US regular silver dollars.


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