1865 LIBERTY HEAD $10 AU58

Price: $62,500.00
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Coin Description

WELL STRUCK, LUSTROUS SPECIMEN. LESS THAN 75 COINS BELIEVED TO EXIST IN ALL GRADES TODAY. SOLE SECOND FINEST GRADED BY PCGS WITH THE FINEST BEING A MS63.

The 1865 is the final P-mint issue in the No Motto Liberty Eagle series, and it is an important key-date issue with just 3,980 business strikes originally produced.  A fairly large number of those coins have survived when compared to the survivability rates for the 1863 and 1864, but we stress that the 1865 is still an extremely rare issue in an absolute sense.  We believe that only 55-65 coins are traceable today, just one example of which was recovered with the treasure of the S.S. Republic.  All but two or three of the 1865 Eagles that have survived are circulated to one degree or another.

Specifications

Grading Service: PCGS SKU: 144236
Grade: AU 58 Cert Number: 05813620
Census*: 1/1 CU Price Guide*: $62,500.00
*Source: PCGS Price Guide. Although we try to be as accurate as possible on the listed population, third party pricing and coin information, information constantly changes. We suggest you verify all information.
Bring This Coin to Life
In 1865, the United States experienced a year of profound transformation and tumult, marked most notably by the culmination of the Civil War, a defining conflict that reshaped the nation's political, social, and moral landscape. The war, which had raged for four long and bloody years, finally drew to a close with the surrender of General Robert E. Lee's Confederate forces to Union General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House in Virginia on April 9. This momentous event signaled the end of the Confederacy and the preservation of the Union, setting the stage for the arduous process of Reconstruction and national reconciliation. However, the nation's hopes for a smooth transition to peace were shattered just days later, on the night of April 14, when President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, a fervent Confederate sympathizer, at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. Lincoln's death plunged the country into deeper mourning and uncertainty, complicating the already daunting task of rebuilding the divided country without its moral and political compass. As the nation grappled with the aftermath of Lincoln's assassination and the end of the war, the capture of Jefferson Davis, the President of the Confederate States, by Union forces on May 10 in Irwinville, Georgia, marked the final chapter in the Confederacy's collapse. Davis's capture symbolized the definitive end of Confederate aspirations and the futility of further resistance, effectively closing the military chapter of the Civil War. The events of 1865, from the end of the Civil War and Lincoln's assassination to the capture of Jefferson Davis, were pivotal in shaping the course of American history. They not only brought an end to the deadliest conflict on American soil but also set the nation on a fraught path toward healing and rebuilding, confronting the deep scars of division and the challenge of defining freedom and equality in the post-war era.