Three Cent Civil War Coin

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Collecting Nut, Feb 20, 2025.

  1. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Here’s a first year Three Cent Piece, 1865, so a Civil War coin. Three Cent Nickel pieces were produced because the public hoarded the Three Cent Silver coins. Despite this silver ones were still produced for circulation until 1873 but in very low numbers. The highest mintage for a silver piece for duplicate years was a total of 22,000. The nickel pieces had the lowest mintage for those same years with a total produced of just over 1 million coins. Here’s my 1865 Nickel Three Cent Piece, first year coin.
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  3. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Neat. Thanks for sharing.

    The only Three Cent coin I have is this one. A cud.
    Also 1865..

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  4. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

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  5. Neal

    Neal Well-Known Member

    They also resorted to paper for the same reasons. The only 3 cent note was issued from 12/5/1864 until 8/16/1869. I don't imagine the businesses really liked any of them because the odd denomination would have made change cumbersome.
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  6. BRandM

    BRandM Counterstamp Collector

    Yeah, the 3-cent coins and paper weren't popular with anyone. Even modern collectors mostly stay away from the coins but they are a nice niche collectable.

    Bruce
     
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  7. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    One of my favorite US coins. I'd love to do a business strike set, but that 1885 is a killer!
     
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  8. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    hehe I love 3 cent nickles (1865 and later) but I love the 3 cent silvers just as much :D so here are all 3 silver types and a later 3 cent nickle as well :D
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  9. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    A number of them are but an 1885 is painful. :)
     
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  10. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I have saved a nice collection of Civil War dates. The history behind them is special to me. They will go to my son when the time comes.
     
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  11. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    It is an nice set. I have the 1885, the only one I don't have is the 1884, also a killer coin. I could finish the set if I would break down and buy a proof (a lot cheaper), but all the others are business strikes.

    And the three cent nickels came out in 1865, but they weren't authorized until after the Civil War was over.
     
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  12. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    I thought about going the proof route, but it just didn't seem right.
     
  13. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    For me it isn't right because I collect coins, and I don't consider proofs to be real coins. For me a COIN it something issued with the intent that it circulate as money. Proofs are not intended to circulate as money. They CAN circulate but they aren't intended to.
     
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