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Denver Gold and Silver Coins
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
Open Monday - Thursday
from 9 am to 6 pm

Friday and Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm
Call anytime - leave a message: 303-835-8892
The three-dollar
piece was a United States coin produced from 1854 to
1889. Its value was intended to tie in with the
postal system. At the time, a first class postage
stamp was worth 3¢, and such stamps were often sold
in sheets of one hundred stamps. Therefore, the
three-dollar piece was exactly enough money to
purchase a sheet of stamps. The Treasury Department
also withdrew its fractional currency issues
starting in the late 1870s, of which there was a 3¢
denomination. A $3 gold coin would have helped
facilitate this for those desiring gold in exchange
for their 3¢ coins. Despite these potential uses,
the coin was minted in small quantities (~535,000
for the entire series, the smallest amount for any
series of
circulating United States coins), and was never
widely used in commerce. Its 1854 purchasing power
would be the equivalent of $72.68 today.
Authorized by the Act of February 21, 1853, the coin
was designed by James B. Longacre. The obverse
depicts a representation of LIBERTY wearing a
headdress of an Indian princess and the reverse a
wreath of corn, cotton, and tobacco. The
three-dollar piece was .900 gold and .100 copper for
a total weight of 5.015 grams. It had a diameter of
20.5 mm with a reeded edge. Quantities were minted
in Philadelphia each year of production, as well as
in Dahlonega, New Orleans, and San Francisco in
certain years. Proofs were officially recorded as
being minted at Philadelphia from 1859 to 1889, and
only proofs were minted in 1875 and 1876. Proofs of
dates prior to 1859 are also known, including
extremely rare branch-mint proofs. The total
quantity of coins minted each year ranges from 2 for
the 1870-S (of which only one has been confirmed to
collectors) to 138,618 for the 1854. Today, any
specimen has a value of at least several hundred
dollars, and the most valuable is the unique 1870-S,
currently (2007) valued at $4,000,000 in AU-50.
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