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1890-O $1 Morgan Silver Dollar CHOICE BU * NICE COIN*

US $239.95
ApproximatelyAU $349.37
Condition:
not specified
More information - About this item condition
Postage:
US $5.00 (approx. AU $7.28) USPS First Class®.
Located in: Belmar, New Jersey, United States
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Estimated between Fri, 27 Sep and Mon, 30 Sep to 43230
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eBay item number:385387332059
Last updated on 20 Jul, 2023 07:17:31 AESTView all revisionsView all revisions

Item specifics

Country/Region of Manufacture
United States
Coin
Morgan
Composition
90% Silver, 10% Copper
Year
1890
Strike Type
Business
Mint Location
New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana

About this product

Product Information

<h2>Q. David Bowers</h2>The following narrative, with minor editing, is from my "Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States: A Complete Encyclopedia" (Wolfeboro, NH: Bowers and Merena Galleries, Inc., 1993)<br/><br/>Numismatic Information<br/><br/>Hoard coins: Probably at least 500,000 of these, if not far more, were held by the Treasury (and stored in Philadelphia) until the 1960s, and released during the 1962-1964 era. Earlier, 1890-O dollars had been paid out over a long period of decades, with an especially large release occurring in 1953-1954, with the result that 1890-O dollars in Mint State have been neither rare nor expensive. <br/><br/>Circulated grades: In worn grades the 1890-O is one of the most common of all Morgan dollars. Over a million exist, and this is after large quantities were melted as recently as the late 1970s. <br/><br/>Mint State grades: As a class, Mint State 1890-O dollars are common. However, most of these are in lower grade levels, with an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 at the MS-60 to 62 demarcation. MS-63 coins are also relatively easy to find, with a population of 40,000 to 70,000. In MS-64 grade the 1890-O becomes scarce; about 10,000 to 18,000 exist. Full MS-65 coins are quite scarce, especially if sharply struck, and I believe that if each and every one could be counted, the total would be only 1,000 to 2,000. <br/><br/>Most Mint State coins are weakly struck, although there are some exceptions. Numerous poorly struck coins show microscopic "ridging" or "metal flow" in the fields, particularly near the borders. The lustre on other coins is usually frosty and attractive. Concerning striking quality, Wayne Miller wrote: "This date is a close runner-up to 1891-O in the contest for the 'Pancake of the Morgan series' title." <br/><br/>Prooflike coins: Prooflike coins are relatively plentiful and usually are better struck than non-prooflike pieces, although flatly struck prooflike coins are also easy to find. Wayne Miller noted that 1890-O is available in cameo prooflike condition with frosty devices-often with heavy bagmarks. However, deep prooflike pieces with minimum abrasions are often found and are somewhat overrated (as of Miller's commentary in 1982), but look very attractive. Only about 3% of extant DMPL coins are MS-65 or finer. The "Proof' offered by B.M. Douglas in The Numismatist, 12/51, was probably a DMPL. On the other hand, that in the "Anderson Dupont" sale (Stack's, Nov. 12-13, 1954), at a then high $25, may have been something better. It has not been traced. <br/><br/>Die rotation: VAM-2 is known with the reverse die misaligned 20° to 60° clockwise from normal. This anomaly is known in Mint State. VAM-8 exists with the reverse die rotated 36° counterclockwise from normal. Only circulated specimens have been seen by Van Allen and Mallis. <br/><br/>Varieties<br/><br/>Circulation strikes:<br/><br/>1. Even Date: Breen-5613, high zero, Breen-5614, VAM-7 and others. R.W. Julian says that 41 reverses were shipped; no data on when these arrived. The mintage probably required at least 40 die-pairs. <br/><br/>Dies prepared: Obverse: Unknown, probably about 40; Reverse: 41. <br/><br/>Circulation strike mintage: 10,701,000 (8,721,000 un-der the Act of February 28, 1878 and 1,980,000 under the Sherman Silver Purchase Act); Delivery figures by month: January: 1,000,000; February: 1,000,000; March: 1,000,000; April: 1,000,000; May: 750,000; June: 700,000; July: 700,000; Au-gust:' 460,000 + 280,000; September: 150,000 + 700,000; October: 500,000 + 500,000; November: 500,000 +500,000; December: 961,000. <br/><br/>Estimated quantity melted: Probably millions under the 1918 Pittman Act. <br/><br/>Availability of prooflike coins: Such issues, many of which are DMPL, are estimated to exist to the extent of 25,000-50,000 (URS-16). Only about 3% of the extant DMPL coins are MS-65 or better. <br/><br/>Characteristics of striking: Usually seen flatly struck, but there are exceptions

Product Identifiers

Designer
George T. Morgan
eBay Product ID (ePID)
170385085

Product Key Features

Strike Type
Business
Mint Location
New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana
Composition
90% Silver, 10% Copper
Year
1890

Dimensions

Weight
26.73g

Additional Product Features

Mintage
171
EDGE
Reeded
Mint
New Orleans
Denomination
$1
PCGS Number
7200
Diameter
38.1mm
Mint Mark
O

Item description from the seller

Ed'S Elegant Coins inc

Ed'S Elegant Coins inc

99.9% positive Feedback
17K items sold
Joined Feb 2000
Usually responds within 24 hours
WE ALWAYS HAVE NEW COINS TO OFFER.

Detailed seller ratings

Average for the last 12 months
Accurate description
5.0
Reasonable postage costs
4.8
Postage speed
5.0
Communication
5.0

Seller Feedback (12,578)

  • d***l (3447)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past 6 months
    Verified purchase
    Item just as pictured. Super fast shipping, well packaged. 5 star seller!!!! Thanks!!
  • f***u (12)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past year
    Verified purchase
    Coin was as described and shipping was fast - great shopping and buying experience! I did order 2 coins and was charged 2 shipping charges of $5 each and the items were sent in the same package and were very light, so not sure why the seller didn't proactively offer a refund, but.
    Reply from: edselegantcoins- Feedback replied by seller edselegantcoins.- Feedback replied by seller edselegantcoins.
    Ty! just been very busy as of late. I just issued you the extra shipping charge.
  • b***t (153)- Feedback left by buyer.
    Past 6 months
    Verified purchase
    Nice coin, actually better than expected. Was as described. Prompt shipping. Well packaged. Fair price.

Product ratings and reviews

4.8
193 product ratings
  • 169 users rated this 5 out of 5 stars
  • 21 users rated this 4 out of 5 stars
  • 1 users rated this 3 out of 5 stars
  • 1 users rated this 2 out of 5 stars
  • 1 users rated this 1 out of 5 stars

Would recommend

Good value

Good quality

Most relevant reviews

  • Top favourable review

    Rarer 'O' Mint in Gem-BU Morgan Dollars!

    The 1890-O Morgan Silver Dollar is common in Uncirculated condition but Gems are scarce. Part of the reason for the scarcity of Gems is because many of this date come poorly struck. Many Mint State examples have the details of a Very Fine coin, despite having full luster on both sides. The most "common" Uncirculated grade is MS-63, followed by MS-64 and MS-62, in that order. Prooflikes and Deep Mirror Prooflikes are scarce; in Gem condition they both become rare. The finest examples certified by PCGS are 19 MS-66's, a single MS-66 Prooflike, and a single MS-66 Deep Mirror Prooflike

    Verified purchase: YesSold by: 29dozeneggs

  • Best Coin to Start Coin Collection, Good Coin to Add to an Existing One

    This is not only a terrific coin to start a collection, but also a solid contribution to an existing one. It has almost every aspect a collector could want. The artwork is beautiful, the history fascinating, and the market broad. It can appreciated as art work, enjoyed as an antique, or held for investment. It could also spark an interest in numismatics as its place in understanding currency, the economic demands that created the coin and at the end stopped its production, is undeniable. This particular coin is a good value with solid NGC provenance and I can see only upsides in owning it.

    Verified purchase: YesSold by: tecc1

  • Older Morgan’s

    This is always going to be beautiful to me no matter how wore they are. My 1882-O was pretty badly wore but that’s the reason I bought it, it had history and it tells a story of being circulated, in and out of hands. What all has this coin bought? A head of cattle or 12? Someone a place to stay for a while? Maybe some cowboy in a salon drinking, playing poker, lost the game and the coin. Then the winner give it to a “matron” lol for a “sleeping” companion. Never know my imagination just runs wild.

    Verified purchase: YesSold by: deltonacoins

  • quality morgan

    for a 100 year old coin trying to collect a clean without being worn out this coin has what a collector is looking for.

    Verified purchase: YesSold by: micro*bay

  • The coins have a good appearance. Not a lot of wear or scratches. I would have to weight them and check them with a magnetic.

    They would look great in a collection.

    Verified purchase: YesSold by: polaris_44