2.5 Dollar USA (1776 - ) Gold

Metal:
Issue year(s):
1908-1929



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1914, United States. Gold “Indian Head” Quarter Eagle ($2.50)

Designer: Bela Lyon
Mint Place Philadelphia
Type: Indian Head Gold Quarter Eagle
Denomination: Indian Head 2.5 Dollars (Gold 1/4 Eagle)
Material: Gold (.900)
Diameter: 18mm
Weight: 4.13gm




The Indian Head gold pieces or Pratt-Bigelow gold coins were two separate coin series, identical in design, struck by the United States Mint: a two-and-a-half dollar piece, or quarter eagle, and a five-dollar coin, or half eagle. The quarter eagle was struck from 1908 to 1915 and from 1925–1929. The half eagle was struck from 1908 to 1916, and in 1929. The pieces remain the only US circulating coins with recessed designs. These coins were the last of their denominations to be struck for circulation, ending series which had begun in the 1790s.


President Theodore Roosevelt, from 1904, vigorously advocated new designs for United States coins, and had the Mint engage his friend, the sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, to design five coins (the four gold pieces and the cent) that could be changed without congressional authorization. Before his death in August 1907, Saint-Gaudens completed designs for the eagle ($10 piece) and double eagle, although both required subsequent work to make them fully suitable for coining.


With the eagle and double eagle released into circulation by the end of 1907, the Mint turned its attention to the half eagle and quarter eagle, originally planning to duplicate the double eagle’s design. The Mint had difficulty fitting the required inscriptions on the small gold coins. President Roosevelt, in April 1908, convinced Mint Director Frank Leach that it would be a better idea to strike a design similar to that of the eagle, but below the background, to secure a high-relief effect. Such coins were designed by Boston sculptor Bela Lyon Pratt at the request of the President’s friend, William Sturgis Bigelow. After some difficulty, the Mint was successful in this work, though Pratt was unhappy at modifications made by the Mint’s engravers, headed by longtime Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber.


The two pieces were struck until World War I caused gold to vanish from circulation, and then again in the late 1920s. Neither coin circulated much; the quarter eagle saw popularity as a Christmas present. In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt stopped the issuance of gold in coin form, and recalled many pieces which were in private or bank hands.


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Posted by: anonymous  2019-03-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika. 2 1/2 Dollars 1911. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. GOLD. Sehr schön - vorzüglich

(900 X 455pixels, file size: ~98K)
Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 2 1/2 Dollars 1929. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. In US Plastic-Holder NGC MS62. GOLD. Vorzüglich

(900 X 456pixels, file size: ~125K)
Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 2 1/2 Dollars 1929. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. GOLD. Kleine Kratzer, sehr schön - vorzüglich

(900 X 456pixels, file size: ~123K)
Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 2 1/2 Dollars 1928. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. GOLD. Kleine Kratzer, sehr schön - vorzüglich

(900 X 455pixels, file size: ~122K)
Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 2 1/2 Dollars 1927. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. GOLD. Winzige Kratzer, Vorzüglich

(900 X 456pixels, file size: ~122K)
Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-28
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 2 1/2 Dollars 1926. Indian Head. K.M. 128, Friedberg 120. GOLD. Kleine Kratzer, fast vorzüglich
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Indian Head Gold Eagle Coin
Articles
Gold coins circulation during Franklin D. Ro ...   During President Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency, the United States Mint did not produce any $2.5 gold coins, commonly known as quarter eagles. The last quarter eagle minted for circulation was the Indian Head design, which ceased production in 1929.However, during Roosevelt's presidency, the United States Mint did mint several commemorativ ...

Sold for: $4800.0
1908-S. NGC graded MS-66 Red. Nice strike with relatively fresh color. Frosty Gem. Tied for finest at NGC. Satiny matte surfaces explode with intense luster and varying shades of coppery and gol ...

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1876. PCGS graded Proof 65 Cameo. Blast white Gem Cameo Proof. Only 1,260 struck. The Twenty-cent piece, sometimes called a "double dime," had a brief appearance in the fourth quarter of the 19t ...

Sold for: $8750.0
1919-S. PCGS graded MS-64. CAC Approved. A very popular key date. Light hint of gold tone on the obverse. A well struck near-Gem that has deep silvery mint frost from center to periphery. A few ...
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