354

***Auction Highlight*** 1918/7-s Fs-101 Standing Liberty Quarter 25c Graded BU+ By USCG (fc)

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:25.00 USD Estimated At:5,477.50 - 21,910.00 USD
***Auction Highlight*** 1918/7-s Fs-101 Standing Liberty Quarter 25c Graded BU+ By USCG (fc)
***Auction Highlight*** 1918/7-s Fs-101 Standing Liberty Quarter 25c Graded BU+ By USCG. Rarely Offered Mint State 1918/7-S Quarter FS-101. Remarkable condition rarity for a 20th century United States Mint overdate that is elusive even in circulated grades. Softly frosted in texture, the surfaces are colorfully toned with a lovely appearance. Overall smooth in hand with an acceptable quality of strike for this challenging variety, the all important 7 under digit is plainly evident even without the aid of a loupe. As the only overdate and, indeed, major variety in the Standing Liberty quarter series of 1916 to 1930, the popularity of the 1918/7-S with specialists knows no bounds. The end of the First World War and the immediate post-War era saw a great need for circulating coinage in the booming economy of the United States. To supply enough working dies to all of the operational mints, the engraving department at the Philadelphia Mint undoubtedly went through periods of time when it was simultaneously producing dies for multiple years' production. One of those time periods was the end of 1917, when dies for both 1917- and 1918-dated coinage were being prepared. Researcher J.H. Cline presents this variety as a conventional repunched date, but more recent scholarship suggests that is most likely a product of a hub error. One obverse die for the Standing Liberty quarter received its first impression from a 1917-dated hub, but its second either purposely or inadvertently from a 1918-dated hub, creating the 1918/7 overdate. An S mintmark was applied and the die was shipped to the West Coast for use at the San Francisco Mint, where it struck an unknown, although presumably limited number of the 11,072,000 quarters struck in that facility during 1918. (The origins of another classic 20th century overdate -- the 1918/7-D Buffalo nickel -- are identical in both time and cause.)The 1918/7-S remained unknown to the numismatic community until 1937, the overdate making its first appearance in the Standard Catalog in 1942. The intervening 19 years between this overdates production and its numismatic discovery were sufficient to see the wear, if not loss, of most examples through circulation. Indeed, survivors are highly elusive in all grades, and they are nothing short of rare in Mint State. A Corey's Pick, Bid to Win, Don't let it get Away, you might not find its equal Coin. I give this coin my highest recommendation