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1916-D 10C MS66 Full Bands PCGS. Although serious plan 1916-D[10C] MS66 Full Bands PCGS.

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:10,000.00 USD Estimated At:1.00 - 1,000,000.00 USD
1916-D 10C MS66 Full Bands PCGS. Although serious plan 1916-D[10C] MS66 Full Bands PCGS.
<B>1916-D<10C> MS66 Full Bands PCGS.</B></I> Although serious plans to introduce a new dime to supplant the staid (at least, considered so by most pundits) Charles Barber design had been under way since 1915, numerous factors collaborated to forestall the production of the Winged Liberty design until late in 1916 at the Denver Mint. Those factors included a late-year focus on the mintage of quarters to meet an unanticipated demand, the need to get the new dime design approved by AT&T (pay-telephone booths became common during the 1910s in America) as well as a vending machine manufacturer, and last-minute design tweaks. This confluence of factors resulted in a scant mintage of 264,000 D-mint pieces, all released in November 1916. An instant rarity was born.<BR> Member of the non-numismatic public saved most of the Mint State survivors as mementos, and they were probably carelessly stored. Accordingly, most Mint State survivors grade MS64 and lower. As a generally well-struck first-year issue, most Mint State survivors do show full detail in the central horizontal bands. An overwhelming preponderance of Mint State survivors at both NGC and PCGS are graded at the MS64 Full Bands level. The present superbly appealing piece, a Premium Gem with Full Bands, is among the 23 finest survivors at both services combined, and is exceeded by a mere eight pieces. It offers a light, attractive, irregular translucent patina of smoke-gray, amber-gold, and olive on both sides (but heaviest at the reverse rim) beneath which much luster radiates. Not only are the crucial central bands full, but the diagonal bands are almost entirely full, with the bottom one showing just a touch of merging with the nearby olive leaf. Exceedingly few abrasions of any size are present, with a couple of small reeding marks, seen only with a loupe near the top of the Liberty cap worth a mention, and entirely with