I Bought my First Piece of Southern Gold!

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Bradley Trotter, Dec 9, 2022.

  1. Bradley Trotter

    Bradley Trotter Well-Known Member

    It isn't the most eye-appealing specimen, nor did I pay all that much for it for obvious reasons.

    Reverse:

    1852-2.jpg

    Obverse:

    1852-1.jpg

    Mintmark Closeup:

    1852 Closeup.jpg
     
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  3. H8_modern

    H8_modern Attracted to small round-ish art

    Sometimes with southern gold you have to take what you can get. This is my only one.

    upload_2022-12-9_19-8-17.jpeg

    upload_2022-12-9_19-8-42.jpeg

    upload_2022-12-9_19-9-4.jpeg
     
  4. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    It’s an absolute shame that people messed with those coins.
     
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  5. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Nice! Did the seller know what it was?
     
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  6. Bradley Trotter

    Bradley Trotter Well-Known Member

    Yeah. I paid roughly the price of a generic quarter eagle.
     
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  7. Omegaraptor

    Omegaraptor Gobrecht/Longacre Enthusiast

    I don't see it that way. At the time these were just circulating coins. The face value of these coins was a lot of money back then and few could afford to save them just because they had a special mintmark.

    If anything, we are lucky that these coins are still with us to be enjoyed by collectors today. Only 6360 of the gold dollar were minted, and with only 125-175 known today, this one was luckier than most of its kind.
     
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  8. Bradley Trotter

    Bradley Trotter Well-Known Member

    Well said, @Omegaraptor.
     
  9. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Collectors only looked at dates until the mid 1890s. There was an article by a man named Heath who got the mint mark thing started then. If you were collecting only by date, the Charlotte and Dahlonega coins were often less well made then their Philadelphia counterparts, which made them less desirable.

    But yes, the high value thing also discouraged the collection of those coins. It's why very few high grade $20 gold pieces come from anywhere other than coins recovered from shipwrecks.
     
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  10. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Here is high graded 1852-D gold dollar, which shows the full "D."

    1852-D Gold Dollar All.jpg
     
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