1843

1879 S$1 Schoolgirl Dollar, Judd-1609, Pollock-1805, R

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:60,000.00 USD Estimated At:1.00 - 1,000,000.00 USD
1879 S$1 Schoolgirl Dollar, Judd-1609, Pollock-1805, R
<B>1879<img border='0' src='http://www.heritagecoins.com/images/star.gif' width=10 height=10>$1> Schoolgirl Dollar, Judd-1609, Pollock-1805, R.7, PR66 Red and Brown NGC.</B></I> The popular "Schoolgirl" design by George T. Morgan. A bust of Liberty faces left with the inscription E PLURIBUS*******UNUM****around and the date, 1879 below. Her hair is combed straight and tied with a ribbon, a headband crossing the top of her head is inscribed LIBERTY. The reverse depicts a defiant eagle facing left standing on a scroll inscribed IN GOD WE TRUST. Struck in copper with a reeded edge.<BR> The "Schoolgirl" dollar is generally considered to be one of the most beautiful designs ever. According to Saul Teichman and Andy Lustig on the USPatterns.com website: "The 'Schoolgirl' name dates back to the April 1891 New York Coin & Stamps (D. Proskey and H.P. Smith) F. W. Doughty sale where a silver specimen and the unique white metal piece were offered. Proskey is credited with the name in the October 1911 edition of <I>The Numismatist</B></I> per Bowers & Merena's Rare Coin Review #110. The earliest known sale of this pattern was a silver specimen sold by Woodward privately in 1883 to T. Harrison Garrett. The first auction occurrence was in Woodward's 101st Vicksburg II sale of September 1888. It was plated in that catalog where it states that only the sale coin and the specimen in the Mint collection were known. (Note: Ed Frossard did the cataloging for that sale and may not have been aware of Woodward's earlier sale of a specimen to T. Harrison Garrett.) The Vicksburg example was bought in by Woodward and went into his 104th Stetson sale of January 1889. An example, probably the Vicksburg-Stetson specimen was sold in Frossard's June 1890 edition of Numisma. The first occurrence in copper was the example plated in the April 1892 New York Coin & Stamp Woodside sale. This coin was later sold by Woodside to Virgil Brand on 3/30/1895. It is likely that most known today in silver a