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[L#0800] 1893-S $1 PCGS MS64

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:150,000.00 USD Estimated At:250,000.00 - 350,000.00 USD
[L#0800] 1893-S $1 PCGS MS64
Fresh as a daisy, silvery white with glowing surfaces like those found on an 1882-S issue. In fact, the luster is so fresh and dazzling that it retains complete cartwheel spin on both sides. Neither are there any obvious bagmarks or rim problems, only a scattered few tics around the eagle, less noticeable tiny marks on the face, and a few very slight grazes in the frost of the field left of Liberty. In all ways it comes within an eyelash of being MS65 Gem quality. Bidders may want to ratchet up their bids accordingly, since this lovely (and exciting) 1893-S rarity won't sell without a fight among those present. (The PCGS holder serial number 50170888 can be used for purposes of tracing the coin's provenance in future transactions.)

The 1893-S Morgan Dollar has long been sought after as the prime rarity in the Morgan series. Although the Proof-only 1895 belongs in the same class, 1893-S has led a charmed existence for going on 70 years now among collectors and cognoscenti. After a decade and a half of relatively high silver dollar production, the election of President Grover Cleveland and the financial panic caused by the hoarding of gold during this troubled time caused a structural change in government policy toward minting these silver coins. With the repeal of the Sherman Act in 1893 (not to be confused with the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890), the tempo of production at all four coinage factories was drastically reduced. Just 100,000 pieces of the 1893-S were made, a low figure by Morgan dollar standards where production had been running in the millions most years. Furthermore, the majority of 1893-S dollars were either circulated or later melted. Today, even high-end circulated specimens can be very difficult to find and costly to boot. To locate the occasional Mint State piece never fails to elicit attention at an auction. Its importance to the fraternity of serious Morgan Dollar collectors cannot be overstated.