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Denver Gold and Silver Coins
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
Denver Mint Facility
The Denver Mint. In 1858, when gold was discovered
in Colorado, hundreds of merchants, miners and
settlers moved in for their stake. A year later, the
city of Denver was founded; and in 1863, the U.S.
government established a mint facility there. Today,
the United States Mint at Denver manufactures all
denominations of circulating coins, coin dies, the
Denver "D" portion of the annual uncirculated coin
sets and commemorative coins authorized by the U. S.
Congress. It also stores gold and silver bullion.
Historical Background: Assay Office to Renaissance
Palace
The Denver Mint. For its first 46 years, the United
States Mint at Denver was only an assay office in
the Clark, Gruber and Company Bank Building. Miners
brought in gold dust and nuggets to be melted,
assayed and cast into bars stamped with their weight
and quality. By 1895, the Assay Office was booming,
bringing in more than $5.6 million in gold and
silver deposits annually.
In 1904, the government decided to convert the Assay
Office into a working mint, and built a much grander
facility, an Italian Renaissance style building
modeled after a Florentine palace. In 1906, its
first year in operation, the new Mint produced
167,371,035 gold and silver coins valued at $27
million. Today, the Denver Mint's output can exceed
50 million coins a day.
Artifacts from the early days, Denver Mint. Denver
treasures its historic mint building, which is one
of Colorado's oldest institutions. To see this
beautiful facility and learn its history, take a
United States Mint public tour . You will enjoy
special exhibits, artifacts from the United States
Mint's early days and up-close views of the coin
making process.
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