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Bust Dollars 1800 B-16 PCGS MS63

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:5.00 - 10.00 USD
Bust Dollars 1800 B-16 PCGS MS63

Bust Dollars 1800 B-16. BB-187. PCGS graded Mint State 63. Die State III. Perfectly centered, with fully defined dentils all around on both sides. Obverse devices are superbly struck, including all obverse stars and every feature of Miss Liberty's hair and drapery. All reverse features are nearly as well defined. Much mint luster remains, sparkling beneath mottled shades of blue and violet, blending with a hint of champagne gold. Eye appeal is stunning. Surfaces are close to perfection. Additionally, it is free of adjustment marks.<BR><BR>This coin may well be the finest known example of Bolender-16. Bowers' encyclopedia on silver dollars reports the finest seen example to be one sold by Heritage at their 1988 ANA Convention auction, and that coin was used to illustrate his reference. The offered example is not the same coin. On ours, the 11th, 12th and 13th stars exhibit full detail, as do nearly all reverse stars, and Miss Liberty's hair appears more sharply defined. All criteria considered, the "63" assignment by PCGS is really quite conservative.<BR><BR>As a die variety, B-16 is one of the more abundant bearing this date. Utilizing Obverse 5, it is characterized by an obverse "Die Dot" below BE, just left of Liberty's highest hair curl and a die flaw between RT. Considerable roughness inside the rim above ES quickly identifies "Reverse D," which is shared also with B-20. On the obverse, there is a large thin die break arching downward from the top of the 10th star across Liberty's bust, through the second 0 to the rim. In spite of B-16's status as one of the more common varieties, like all other Bust dollars of this date, in Mint State it is extremely rare. Perhaps three or four are known at all levels. As previously stated, this example is a likely prospect for the finest known.<BR><BR>Strictly Mint State Draped Bust dollars have a unique appeal to collectors. The birth of American coin collecting was still a generation away and the survival of this high denomination silver coin was purely a matter of happenstance. At the dawn of the 19th century a silver dollar had substantial buying power and few escaped circulation.. We expect bidding competition to be aggressive for this magnificent, once in a lifetime quality early dollar. Examine it and you'll understand why.