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1874 G Three Dollar gold piece, PCGS XF45 - most affordable problem-free 1874

$ 868.03

Availability: 69 in stock
  • Time Period Manufactured: Pre-1933
  • Mint Location: Philadelphia
  • Certification Number: 47740919
  • Precious Metal Composition: 0.14512 ounce
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Circulated
  • Coinage Type: Princess head
  • Grade: XF 45
  • Designer: James B. Longacre
  • Series: Princess Gold
  • Diameter: 20.5mm
  • Metal Composition: 90% gold; 10% copper
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: 1874 G Three Dollar gold piece, authenticated / graded / encapsulated by PCGS at Choice Extra Fine, XF45.
  • Edge Type: Reeded
  • Strike Type: Business
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Certification: PCGS
  • Geography: United States
  • Mintage: 41,800
  • Fineness: 0.9
  • Denomination:
  • Category: Gold Coinage
  • Weight: 5.015g / 0.16oz
  • Year: 1874
  • Composition: Gold
  • Years for Type: 1854-1889

    Description

    1874 G Three Dollar gold piece, authenticated / graded / encapsulated by PCGS at Extra Fine, XF45.  What a special coin the Three dollar piece is, both to U.S. history and our own collections!  One specimen is all it takes to brighten up a collection, and one specimen is what we have cued up for sale here.
    As our readers and collectors may know, the 1850s through the rest of the century and beyond was a time of an influx of riches from California and the rest of the West, in the form of amounts of mined gold bullion the likes of what had not been seen before, even in ancient times.  So, passing laws authorizing new denominations of gold coins was not hard, and so it proved with the new gold dollar and gold double-eagle, the latter which makes a person's pocket heavy (just try it, you can buy ours).  Records are a bit murky about why we got this coin, and researchers have been writing about it (= guessing) ever since.  Was it so you could buy a sheet of 100 3-cent stamps?  These did circulate in the Frontier West, as paper money was unlikely to be trusted much.  Whatever the reason, these sat in many bank cashier drawers (no, we don't know which compartment) and later, in the 1870s-1880s, were asked for and given as birthday gifts; saved ones in near-new conditions exist to be collected here, which may be why we have one in XF.
    This specimen is at an enviable Choice XF grade, with plenty of detail and some gold lustre, readable Liberty on the headband, and no spots.  Problem-free coins can be hard to find and a joy when acquired.  We got this one, but well, it's for sale!  This may be a gold but we treat it like our prized s and s.  We are pleased to offer this 1874 G Three Dollar gold piece, authenticated / graded / encapsulated by PCGS at Choice Extra Fine, XF45, for you.