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Join us live on Sunday, 1/26 - Monday 1/27 at 1:30pm ET!
Every auction has something for everyone, there is always a bargain to be had! We put together the highest quality items in the bullion, coins, currency, and exonumia categories. From large estates to small estates, consignments from around the country, we have it all! We have every type of rare estate that almost every auction has something you will never see again! Ranging from Morgans and Rare Gold to VAMS and Varieties to Currency and Proof Sets, there really is something for every kind of bidder.
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7:30pm ET- 2:00am ET with Shanny!
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The higher Value Lots will begin Each Night at 7:30pm with Shanny.
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LOTTO 6555:
IR 1914-d Gold Indian Quarter Eagle $2 1/2 ms64+ SEGS
dettagli...
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Venduto per: $1 300
Prezzo incluse commissioni.:
$
1 534
Prezzo iniziale:
$
5
Prezzo stimato :
$5 531 - $11 062
Commissione per la casa d'aste: 18%
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IR 1914-d Gold Indian Quarter Eagle $2 1/2 ms64+ SEGS
1914-d Gold Indian Quarter Eagle $2 1/2 ms64+ SEGS. 0 Per David Akers Of PCGS "he 1914-D is the third rarest issue of the series but there is more of a difference in rarity between it and the two dates ahead of it (1911-D and 1914) than there is between it and the five or six dates that follow it. Low grade Mint State specimens are not hard to find, but the population really drops off quickly after MS-63. I have seen a number of MS-65 pieces but I cannot recall ever seeing a superb MS-67 specimen, although a few have been reported by other specialists in the series. This issue is very underrated in top grade, and I dare say that even most experts have failed to recognize how difficult to find this issue is in MS-65 or better condition.Not as well struck as the 1914; often softly struck on the eagle's leg and wing and the feathers on the headdress. Less gtranular than the 1911-D or the early Philadelphia Mint issues and generally with very good to excellent lustre. The color is typically a coppery gold but medium yellow gold specimens with a touch of green also exist. The mintmark is usually fairly sharp and clearly defined, much bolder than on most examples of the 1911-D or 1925-D. Some specimens are weak at the borders, again probably the result of buckled dies. Overall, the quality of manufacture of this issue was not to a very high standard, possibly the worst in the series. "

