Showing 217–225 of 2355 results
Similar in design to the regular $5 Liberty except Moffat & Co appears on the coronet instead of LIBERTY and the reverse has the legend S.M.V. California Gold replacing UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. This nearly mint state example, of this relatively crude coin, has nice detail and plenty of light yellow-gold luster remaining.
Large Date. C-1. Well struck with glossy chocolate brown surfaces that display a tiny trace of red.
A well above average strike for this rare date and a brilliant base with gold, lavender, and turquoise toning. Just 140,000 minted with few high grade survivors.
Well detailed with a well defined head, stars, and wreath. The surfaces are lustrous and mostly white with light toning mainly at the borders.
Overdate, FS-301. Well struck and nearly mint state with attractive green, gold, and blue toning.
Moffat & Co. of San Francisco struck rectangular gold ingots and gold coins. They produced $5 pieces in 1849 and 1850 and $10 pieces in 1849. The words MOFFAT & CO appear on Liberty’s coronet instead of LIBERTY as seen on regular U.S. Mint issues. This is one of the few mint state survivors of […]
Small Date. Far rarer than the Large Date variant of this date.
The first regular issue U.S. Double Eagle. The unique 1849 in the Smithsonian Museum is technically a pattern. This is a pleasing example with sharp detail and bright lustrous surfaces.
The scarcest Braided Hair Half Cent in mint state. This is a very attractive spot free example with glossy choice chocolate brown surfaces.
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