Intentar ORO - Gratis
Timeless Coin Rarities
COINage Magazine
|April-May 2020
EXPLORING CURIOUS AND ENTERTAIN ING PRICE FLUCTUATIONS
Great rarities capture the attention of collectors, dealers, scholarly numismatists, and the news media in coin realms. Moreover, the general public hears about them. When 1913 Liberty Nickels or 1804 silver dollars sell at auction, news coverage is often wide scale.
Curiously, though, the prices realized at auction for great rarities vary tremendously. Auction sale prices for the same great rarity may go up or down in a curious and entertaining manner, though the trend from around 1948 to 2008 was clearly upward.
A coin is a great rarity if fewer than twenty-five are currently known, in all grades, including coins that have problems. A condition rarity is a whole different matter. A coin could be rare in MS-65 and higher grades yet be very common in grades below MS-64. The topic here is auction prices for Great Rarities. Condition rarities are not being covered.
As popularity and rarity are the primary factors employed to rank great rarities, the 1913 Liberty Head nickel is clearly the leader. Just five exist, and only three of those are available to collectors. It is easy to complete the rest of the set of Liberty Head nickels, and circulated common dates are very inexpensive. Before I was ten years old, I collected Liberty Head nickels as did several of my friends. Even if a collector seeks just Proof Liberty Head nickels, not one of the Proofs dating from 1883 to 1912 is particularly rare. Indeed, they are all available for modest amounts in the context of pre-1917 Proof U.S. coins.
Esta historia es de la edición April-May 2020 de COINage Magazine.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE COINage Magazine
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Rob Oberth
Building Bridges in the World of Numismatics
2 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
UP, UP AND AWAY FOR RARE COINS
SPECTACULAR COINage COIN COLLECTOR'S YEARBOOK
8 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
GUIDE TO GRADING LINCOLN HEAD CENTS, WHEAT TYPE (1909-1958)
CAC PROVIDES PHOTOS TO GRADE YOUR COINS
4 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Warren Mills
WARREN MILLS, named a COINage World's Greatest Coin Authority in 2025, is Vice President and Chief Numismatist of Rare Coins of New Hampshire. Mills has been a coin collector since 1965, selling multi-million dollars worth of rare coins yearly.
1 min
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Brett Charville
A Career Path Paved in Gold and Silver
1 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Austin Hutto
The Rise to Top-Tier Coin Grading
1 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
THE INSIDER'S GUIDE To U.S. COIN VALUES
ALL THE LATEST GOLD COIN PRICES
8 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Liz Coggan
I started my company, Elizabeth Coggan Numismatics in 2019.
1 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
WHY SHOULD YOU BUY GOLD & SILVER COINS & BULLION?
MINIMIZING RISK AND MAXIMIZING REWARDS
9 mins
COINage Book 2026
COINage Magazine
World's Best Coin Authority Ian Russell
GLOBALLY RECOGNIZED NUMISMATIST and veteran numismatic auctioneer Ian Russell was introduced to coins and collectibles when he was 14 years old and living in Sydney, Australia. He has graded and handled many of the greatest rarities in numismatics, including the record-breaking $12 million purchase of the world's most valuable silver coin: the unique Specimen 1794 Silver Dollar.
2 mins
COINage Book 2026
Translate
Change font size

