Three Iconic Coins That Rewrote Auction Records
While not quite reaching the 20M+stratosphereofthe1933DoubleEagle,thesethreenumismaticlegendshaveeachcommanded∗∗20M+stratosphereofthe1933DoubleEagle,thesethreenumismaticlegendshaveeachcommanded∗∗5.5 to $9 million** at auction, representing the pinnacle of U.S. coin collecting. Here’s what makes them so extraordinary.
1. 1804 Draped Bust Silver Dollar (Class I Original)
💰 Record: $8,966,146
“The King of American Coins”
Why It’s Legendary:
- Never Circulated: Minted 30 years after 1804 as diplomatic gifts
- Only 8 Originals Exist: All traced to the Sultan of Muscat set
- Mystique: Inspired countless replicas and forgeries
Key Authentication Points:
- Weight: 26.96g (416 grains)
- Edge Lettering: “HUNDRED CENTS ONE DOLLAR OR UNIT”
- Reverse: Heraldic eagle with 13-star shield
- Die Varieties: Class I specimens show specific crack patterns
Last Public Sale: Heritage 2023 – $8,966,146

2. 1794 Flowing Hair Silver Dollar
💰 Record: $6,114,564
America’s First Dollar Coin

Historic Significance:
- First U.S. Dollar: Minted just 2 years after the Mint’s founding
- Silver Plug Variety: Some contain visible silver adjustment plugs
- Condition Rarity: Only 3-4 exist in Mint State
Identifying Features:
- Obverse: Flowing Hair Liberty with 15 stars
- Reverse: Small eagle within wreath
- Edge: Lettered with denomination
- Weight Variance: 26.96g ± 0.5g due to hand-struck production
Recent Auction: Stack’s Bowers 2024 – $6,114,564

3. 1913 Liberty Head Nickel
💰 Record: $5,511,797
The Forbidden Nickel

Notorious History:
- Never Officially Minted: Produced clandestinely under mysterious circumstances
- Only 5 Exist: All accounted for in famous collections
- Pop Culture Status: Featured in “Hawaii Five-O” and museum exhibits
Diagnostic Details:
- Weight: 5.0g
- Diameter: 21.2mm
- Edge: Plain
- Obverse: Liberty Head (should have been Buffalo design)
Last Private Sale: 2022 – $5,511,797 (PCGS PR66)

Why These Coins Command Millions
Common Value Drivers:
✔ Extreme Rarity (5-8 known specimens each)
✔ Fascinating Backstories involving mint irregularities
✔ Museum-Quality Preservation after centuries
✔ Celebrity Ownership Histories (e.g., Eliasberg, Norweb collections)
Potential Discovery Sites:
- European nobility collections (diplomatic gift recipients)
- Old bank collateral (pre-FDIC era holdings)
- Numismatic “time capsules” (unopened 19th century safes)
For Serious Collectors Only
Acquisition Considerations:
- Insurance Requirements: $10M+ policies standard
- Storage: Typically in museum-grade vaults
- Authentication: Requires PCGS/NGC certification + provenance research
View current auction listings: Legendary Coin Marketplace
Leave a Reply