10 Dollar USA (1776 - ) Gold

Metal:
Issue year(s):
1908-1933


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1932, United States. Gold “Indian Head” $10 Dollar (Eagle) Coin.

Mint Year: 1932 References: KM-130. Mint Place: Philadelphia Designer: Augustus Saint-Gaudens Denomination: Gold Eagle (“Indian Head”) $10 Dollar Material: Gold (.900) Weight: 16.72gm Diameter: 27mm

Obverse: Indian head left. Date (1932) below, thirteen stars around.

Reverse: Eagle perched on a bunch of arrows, entwined by olive-branch. Value in words below, motto in right field. Legend: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA / E PLURIBUS UNUM – IN GOLD WE TRUST / TEN . DOLLARS

The Indian Head eagle was a ten-dollar gold piece, or eagle struck by the United States Mint continuously from 1907 until 1916, and then irregularly until 1933. The obverse and the reverse, designed by the sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens,   were originally commissioned for use on other denominations.   Saint-Gaudens was suffering from cancer, and did not survive to see the   coins released.

Beginning in 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt proposed the introduction of new, more artistic designs on US coins,   prompting the Mint to hire Saint-Gaudens to create them. Roosevelt and   Saint-Gaudens at first considered a uniform design for the four   denominations of US coin which were struck in gold, but in 1907   Roosevelt decided to use a model for the obverse of the eagle that the   sculptor had meant to use for the cent. For the reverse of the   ten-dollar coin the President decided on a design featuring a standing bald eagle, which had been developed for the twenty-dollar piece designed by Saint-Gaudens.

The coin, as sculpted by Saint-Gaudens, was in too high relief for the Mint to strike readily; completion of the design modifications   necessary to make the coin sufficiently flat to be struck by one blow of   the Mint’s presses took months. Following the sculptor’s death on   August 3, 1907, Roosevelt insisted that the new eagle be finished and   struck that month. New pieces were given to the President on August 31,   which differ from the coins struck later for circulation.

The omission of the motto “In God We Trust” on the new coins caused public outrage, and prompted Congress to pass a bill mandating its inclusion. Mint Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber added the words and made minor modifications to the design. The Indian   Head eagle was struck regularly until 1916, and then intermittently   until President Franklin Roosevelt directed the Mint to stop producing gold coins in 1933. Its termination   ended the series of eagles struck for circulation begun in 1795. Many   Indian Head eagles were melted by the government in the late 1930s; the   1933 issue is a particular rarity, as few were distributed.


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Posted by: anonymous  2016-12-05
USA 10 Dollars 1910, D-Denver. Indian Head. Fr. 168. PCGS MS64. FDC.

(900 X 451pixels, file size: ~93K)
Posted by: anonymous  2016-06-24
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 10 Dollars 1910 D. Indian Head. K.M. 130, Friedberg 166. GOLD. Vorzüglich

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Posted by: anonymous  2017-04-02
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika10 Dollar 1932 Indian Head. Friedberg 166. GOLD. Winzige Kratzer, sehr schön - vorzüglich

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Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-26
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika 10 Dollars 1908. Indian Head. K.M. 130, Friedberg 166. 15,04 g fein. GOLD. Kleiner Randfehler, vorzüglich

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Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-22
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika10 Dollar 1911. Indian Head. K.M. 130, Friedberg 168. GOLD. Sehr schön

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Posted by: anonymous  2015-11-22
Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika10 Dollar 1910. Indian Head. K.M. 130, Friedberg 168. GOLD. Sehr schön
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Indian Head Gold Eagle Coin
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Indian Head Eagle With Motto   In 1907 a collaboration between the dynamic president Theodore Roosevelt and renown American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens resulted in new designs for both the twenty dollar gold coin and the ten dollar gold coin. The new design on the eagle featured a native American on the obverse, and a standing eagle on the reverse. The Indian was modele ...

Sold for: $3000.0
1923-S Liberty Standing Quarter Dollar. PCGS graded MS-64 PQ. Well struck with the head nearly full. Close examination suggests this is a full head. Lightly toned around the edges. A nice origin ...

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 ...

Sold for: $8500.0
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 ...
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