American Silver Eagle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Silver Eagle (United States) | |
|---|---|
| Value: | 1.00 U.S. dollars |
| Mass: | 31.103 g |
| Diameter: | 40.60 mm |
| Thickness: | 2.98 mm |
| Edge: | reeded |
| Composition: | 99.9% Ag |
| Years of Minting: | 1986-present |
| Catalog Number: | - |
| Obverse | |
| Design: | Liberty walking |
| Designer: | Adolph A. Weinman |
| Design Date: | 1916 |
| Reverse | |
| Design: | Heraldic Eagle with Shield |
| Designer: | John Mercanti |
| Design Date: | 1986 |
The American Silver Eagle is the official silver bullion coin of the United States. It was first released by the United States Mint on November 24, 1986. It is struck only in the 1 troy oz denomination which has a nominal face value of one dollar and is guaranteed to contain one troy ounce of .999 pure silver. It is authorized by the United States Congress and its weight and content is certified by the United States Mint. The American Silver Eagle bullion coin may be used to fund Individual Retirement Account investments. The United States Mint also produces a proof version for coin collectors. The Silver Eagle has been produced at three mints. One is the Philadelphia mint, and some of those issued there carry a "P" mintmark. In the early years of the series, the San Francisco mint issued proofs and these bear an "S". More recent proofs are from the mint at West Point, New York. The latter have a "W" on the reverse, as illustrated here.
Contents |
The design on the obverse has been borrowed from the "Walking Liberty" design by Adolph A. Weinman, which was originally used on the United States' half-dollar coin from 1916 to 1947. This was probably the public's favorite design on any United States silver coin; hence the choice of this design for the Silver Eagle. The reverse portrays a heraldic eagle and was designed by John Mercanti.
Mintages, and thus prices, of uncirculated and proof specimens have varied widely, and the potential collector is advised to check a standard reference book before buying them. Generally the business strikes have minted in the millions, while the proofs were issued in the hundreds of thousands. Thus, most dates are not particularly expensive ($15-$20 each), although some of the early 1990s proofs sell for over $100. Also, the special 1995W issue (30,125 sold) is worth several thousand dollars. The 2006 Silver Eagle 20th Anniversary boxed set, with uncirculated, proof, and the previously-unreleased reverse proof pieces, had a maximum mintage of 250,000 and quickly sold out from the Mint at a catalog price of $100. As of May 2007 it is selling for over $500.
- American Gold Eagle
- American Platinum Eagle
- Canadian Silver Maple Leaf
- United States dollar coin
- 1804 silver dollar
- United States Mint American Eagles page
- Brochure from the U.S. MintPDF (767 KiB)
- American Silver Eagle Pictures
- High Resolution Silver Eagle Image
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Topics | Federal Reserve System · Federal Reserve Note · U.S. dollar · U.S. Mint |
| Current coinage | Cent (penny) · Nickel (5¢) · Dime (10¢) · Quarter dollar · Half dollar · Dollar |
| Paper money | $1 · $2 · $5 · $10 · $20 · $50 · $100 · Larger denominations |
| See also | Bicentennial coinage · Commemoratives · Confederate dollar · Fake denominations · Obsolete denominations · Coin production · In God We Trust |