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1895 Morgan Dollar Article From The Culver City Coin Club.

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The 1895 Morgan dollar By Susan Headley (From the Culver City Coin Club Volume 12, Issue 11 November 2008

The 1895 Morgan dollar is known as the "King of the Morgan dollars" because it is the rarest and most valuable of the entire Morgan dollar series. PF-68 specimens of this rare coin have sold for up- wards of $120,000 at auction.
According to U.S. Mint records, there were 12,000 regular circulation Morgan dollars struck for 1895, and 880 Proof specimens struck. However, only 75 to 80 of the 1895 Morgans have been ac- counted for, all of them Proofs. Where did 12,000 plus coins go?
Numismatic scholars are divided in their opinions as to why the 12,000 business strike specimens of the 1895 Morgan silver dollar have vanished into history. Most believe that the coins were never minted in the first place, and that this notation in the Mint accounting ledgers is in error. Some be- lieve that the coins were minted, but melted down for various reasons. I even read one theory that proposes the coins were lost at sea in a shipwreck.
Actually, the Morgan dollar (so-called because it was designed by George T. Morgan) has been called much worse. When it first came out, it was an unpopular coin frequently derided as the "Buzzard Dollar" because of the shape of the eagle's head and the eagle's generally scrawny ap- pearance. Another popular term for the Morgan was "Cartwheels." The proper term for the coin type is the "Liberty Head" dollar.
Although the Morgan dollar wasn't very popular when it first came out, we know today that it is one of the most popular coin types in the entire U.S. coinage series. Why did this change? The answer is, millions and millions of Morgans! More than half a billion Morgan dollars were made between 1878 and 1904, largely because of a law called the Bland-Allison Act, passed by Con- gress in February of 1878, which mandated that the Treasury must buy 2 to 4 million troy
ounces of silver per month!

The Treasury was forced to buy this incredible amount of silver, which was flowing out of the Comstock Lode in Nevada, because of a group of silver mine owners who had formed a lobbying group. Led by Congressman Richard "Silver Dick" Bland, the silver lobby was able to pass legislation that made the U.S. Treasury its biggest customer.
Of course, the Treasury had to do something with all this silver, so it had the Mint produce the Lib- erty Head, aka Morgan, Silver Dollars. The Morgan dollar wasn't very popular. The eagle was considered ugly, and the coin was deri- sively called a "cartwheel" for its large size and weight, so the Morgan dollars sat in government vaults for many years, languishing in obscurity. Hundreds of millions of them were melted down again through the years, and many, such as the 12,000 made in 1895, are unaccounted for. But there were still plenty of Morgans to go around, since they only circulated in a few small areas.
Sometime around 1960, certain coin dealers became aware that the Treasury was giving out Mor- gan Dollars that were more than 80 years old, on a dollar for dollar basis, in exchange for silver cer- tificates. Many of the dealers were just after the silver bullion at lower-than-market cost, but others realized the potential collector value of these 60 to 80 year-old mint state silver dollars. Tens of mil- lions of Morgans were bought at face value until 1964 when the Treasury shut this practice down. The Treasury had about 2.9 million Morgans left in 1964, mostly scarce Carson City specimens, which the GSA put up for public sale via mail-bid auctions starting in 1972. By 1980, as the supplies dwindled, the public finally became interested in the beautiful Morgan dollar. The real feeding frenzy came, however, when an amazing hoard of more than 400,000 Morgans was found in the basement of Nevada miser LaVere Redfield after his death in 1975.
The Redfield find got a lot of publicity, and as the U.S. population had become a lot more familiar with the value of its silver coins in the years following the change from the silver coinage to the clad coinage, the Morgan dollar finally came into its own as a popular collectible series. The publication of the "Comprehensive Catalog and Encyclopedia of Peace and Morgan silver dollars" by Leroy Van Allen and George Mallis, (the VAM book) also spurred significant collector interest in Morgans.
The VAM book, so named for the initials of its authors, really boosted the values of Morgan dollars into the big time. This book lists all of the known die varieties of the Morgan dollar series, and got collectors to examine their coins more closely for detail. Coins that were previously valued based on a given year's known mintage of X number of specimens, now had sub-categories of specimens for that year based on die varieties. These sub-categories were naturally more scarce than just any coin from that year, so collectors who might previously have been satisfied with one specimen from each year and mint, now had to have several from each to complete the "set."
For the rarest Morgan dollar year/mint variety of them all, the 1895-plain, there are no business strike specimens known to exist. And even though 880 Proof specimens were struck according to Mint records, there are various estimates as to how many remain, ranging from 75 to 80, to up- wards of 500! Some of the Proof specimens have been circulated, usually by accident because the Mint didn't always package them so nicely as they do today, but no business strike example of the 1895 Morgan silver dollar has ever been found.
I s it out there? Possibly. I f so, if it ever comes to light, it will be one of the most spectacular finds ever in American numismatics.
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Thank you for posting this very imformative text.
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From PCGS.

1895 Morgan dollar

Coinage Context


Low mintage: Just 12,000 business strike 1895 dollars are said to have been struck. I have never seen an authentic specimen. It is presumed that the entire mintage, if indeed it ever existed, consisting of only 12 mint bags, went to the melting pot under the provisions of the Pittman Act of 1918.

Numismatic Information


Were business strikes made? Almost immediately from the time of coinage the 1895 dollar was recognized as a Proof-only issue. In The Curio, December 1898, Lancaster (Pennsylvania) dealer Charles Steigerwalt noted this: "Dollars of 1895 from the Philadelphia Mint are only found in the Proof sets." Similarly, in his study, "Die Varieties of Current United States Standard Dollars," published in The Numismatist, June 1898, George W. Rice noted this: "In 1895, Proofs only, numbering less than 1,000, were struck"

It seems to me that it was prevailing knowledge as early as 1898, perhaps even before, that no business strikes of the 1895 dollar were made. Presumably, this information must have come from the Mint itself. The Mint was in constant contact with collectors and dealers and, of course, was actively marketing Proof sets at the time.

To be sure, the Philadelphia Mint reported a coinage of 12,000 business strikes, and five obverse and four reverse dies were prepared for this purpose. However, the prevailing contemporary knowledge and statements that only Proofs were made-statements that were never challenged in the literature at the time-leads me to at least seriously consider the possibility that the 12,000 "business strike" 1895 dollars consisted of a ledger entry for something else. The delivery date of the 12,000 business strikes was given as June 1895, which coincides with the end of the 1894-1895 fiscal year (July 1, 1894 to June 30,1895). Could it have been that 12,000 left-over 1894 business strikes were delivered in June 1895 to be sure that the fiscal year data were correct? The answer may never be known with certainty.'

Key issue: Over the years the 1895 dollar has been the key to the Morgan dollar set. While several other issues are rarer in higher grades (high Mint State grades for business strikes as compared to high Proof grades for the 1895), the 1895 has a lower total population overall. Probably, about 700 or so coins are known to remain today from the original Proof mintage of 880 coins.

Considering that many hundreds of thousands of people desire to collect Morgan dollars, it seems that the 1895 should be in even greater demand than it is. However, quite a few numismatists limit their interest to business strikes, and disqualify the Proof only 1895 from their sets. Even so, demand is intense, and whenever a Proof 1895 comes up for sale, there is usually a great deal of competition for it.

Circulated grades: A few dozen circulated authentic 1895 Philadelphia Mint dollars are known. These match the die varieties described below under Proofs, and represent Proofs that were spent. Most worn "1895" dollars have turned out to be alterations.

Mint State grades: no mint State coin is positively known to exist, although Stuart Mosher (see article under Additional Information below) wrote in 1955 that he thought that a few might survive. The following coin, if confirmed, might be an exception to the view generally held by modern students of the series. John Jay Ford, Jr. told me this concerning it:!

At the ANA show in Denver in 1963, Harry J Forman brought to me an 1895 silver dollar in absolutely Mint State. It had no trace of Proof surface, it wasn't circulated; it wasn't an alteration, because I had access to a Bausch & Lomb binocular microscope-at the time I was into detecting counterfeits. In fact, it was at that show I found the whizzed 1918/7- D nickel which I showed to [Mint Director] Eva Adams, who took me down to the Denver Mint, and we proved there what whizzing was-how this thing had been improved with a brush very cleverly to appear as simulated mint lustre. I might not have taken the 1895 silver dollar down there, but I know I was convinced it was a Philadelphia Mint '95 absolutely Mint State, unaltered.

I didn't have the access to a Proof dollar to compare the dies. But I remember I wanted to buy the coin in the worstway, and the guy wouldn't sell it. This went on and on for about two days. The guy wouldn't budge, wouldn't sell it. I think at the time the '95 silver dollar in Proof was not selling for huge money. I really can't remember what it was selling for, $2,500 or something like that. ... This is not hearsay; I actually held the coin, I tried to buy it. And I offered the guy practically what a Proof was selling for. It was a strong offer in those days.

Proofs 1ike coins: None is known to exist.

Proofs: Proofs are known from at least four (!) different obverse dies (see below). Examples are nearly always well struck. Mint records show that five obverse and four reverse dies were made for Proofs. Why so many, I don't know. Thomas K. DeLorey reported that he has seen "two different 1895 Proofs with delicate file marks at the outer edges of the rims, as though someone at the Mint had carefully removed wire rims (or "finning") from the coins; they were otherwise unimpaired.?

Caveat emptor: Many "1895" dollars have been made by removing the mintmark from 1895-O or 1895-S dollars. Others have been made by altering the third digit in the date of 1885 Philadelphia Mint dollars, and still others were made in different ways. Authentication of any coin not clearly a Proof is mandatory.

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What was I thinking in 1960-70, besides getting my 1st Whitman folder, with ALL those empty holes, Filled!!!!I should of been one of those people who were down at the banks waiting for the doors to open with my Dad's wheel Barrow,(and money) to help carry the 1000-coin bags, HOME!!LOL.
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I wasnt even a tickle in my dads pants in 1960-1970. LOL
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From Monaco Rare Coins.

Rare Coin Articles

Famous Coins 1895 Morgan dollar


One of the most interesting things to note about coins that have been made in the past is how when they first come out most were largely unpopular for one or more reasons. However, as time went on some of these coins became increasingly popular and even rare, coveted by the most avid of collectors. This is especially true of the 1895 Morgan dollar, known by some as the "King of Morgan dollars" due to how it is one of the rarest and valuable of all of the Morgan dollar series. Some of these rare specimens have been known to sell for more than $120,000 US.

Contrary to popular belief concerning the name, the coin entitled the " Morgan dollar" has a picture of Lady Liberty on it. Many individuals openly objected and insulted the coin when it was first released with some individuals even describing the eagle as a "buzzard" with a scrawny appearance. Due to this, in some instances it was also called the "Buzzard Dollar". Yet despite this, the Morgan dollar rose in popularity to become the most famous and popular coin used in the whole of U.S. coinage history.

However, the most notable fact concerning the 1895 Morgan dollars is how over 12,000 of them have reportedly disappeared off the face of the earth. There are many myths concerning this which state that it was only an accounting error and the coins were never minted, while others state the coins were either stolen or lost at sea. Regardless of what the truth is, the Morgan dollar has become a popular and very sought after coin which is worth a great deal, especially to coin collectors. It was in 1975 that the Morgan dollar finally received due note when 400,000 Morgans were found in a basement.



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