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词条 Morgan dollar
释义

  1. Background

  2. Design history

  3. Production

  4. Sherman Silver Purchase Act, Panic of 1893

  5. Pittman Act

  6. Carson City Mint Morgan dollars

  7. San Francisco commemorative dollar

  8. Mintage figures

  9. References

  10. Bibliography

  11. External links

{{about|the United States dollar coin|the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team formerly known as Morgan-Dollar Motorsports|Randy Moss Motorsports}}{{Infobox coin
|cost = 35000.00usd
| Denomination = Morgan dollar
| Value = 1
| Unit = United States dollar
| Mass_grain = 412½
| Mass = 26.73
| Diameter_inch = 1.5
| Diameter = 38.1
| Thickness = 2.4
| Cost = 700.000$
| Edge = Reeded
| Composition =
  • 90.0% Silver
  • 10.0% Copper

| Years of Minting = 1878-1904, 1921
| Mint marks =
  • None (Philadelphia)
  • CC (Carson City)
  • S (San Francisco)
  • O (New Orleans)
  • D (Denver)

| Obverse = 1879S Morgan Dollar NGC MS67plus Obverse.png
| Obverse Design = Liberty
| Obverse Designer = George T. Morgan
| Obverse Design Date = 1878
| Reverse = 1879S Morgan Dollar NGC MS67plus Reverse.png
| Reverse Design = Eagle clasping arrows and olive branch
| Reverse Designer = George T. Morgan
| Reverse Design Date = 1878
}}

The Morgan dollar was a United States dollar coin minted from 1878 to 1904, and again in 1921. It was the first standard silver dollar minted since production of the previous design, the Seated Liberty dollar, ceased due to the passage of the Coinage Act of 1873, which also ended the free coining of silver. The coin is named after its designer, United States Mint Assistant Engraver George T. Morgan. The obverse depicts a profile portrait representing Liberty, while the reverse depicts an eagle with wings outstretched. The mint mark, if any, appears on the reverse above the "o" in "Dollar".

The dollar was authorized by the Bland–Allison Act. Following the passage of the 1873 act, mining interests lobbied to restore free silver, which would require the Mint to accept all silver presented to it and return it, struck into coin. Instead, the Bland–Allison Act was passed, which required the Treasury to purchase between two and four million dollars' worth of silver at market value to be coined into dollars each month. In 1890, the Bland–Allison Act was repealed by the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which required the Treasury to purchase {{convert|4500000|ozt|kg}} of silver each month, but only required further silver dollar production for one year. This act, once again, was repealed in 1893.

In 1898, Congress approved a bill that required all remaining bullion purchased under the Sherman Silver Purchase Act to be coined into silver dollars. When those silver reserves were depleted in 1904, the Mint ceased to strike the Morgan dollar. The Pittman Act, passed in 1918, authorized the melting and recoining of millions of silver dollars. Pursuant to the act, Morgan dollars resumed mintage for one year in 1921. The design was replaced by the Peace dollar later the same year.

In the early 1960s, a large quantity of uncirculated Morgan dollars in their original bags were discovered in the Treasury vaults, including issues once thought rare. Individuals began purchasing large quantities of the pieces at face value, and eventually the Treasury ceased exchanging silver certificates for silver coin. Beginning in the 1970s, the Treasury conducted a sale of silver dollars minted at the Carson City Mint through the General Services Administration. In 2006, Morgan's reverse design was used on a silver dollar issued to commemorate the old San Francisco Mint building.

Background

{{multiple image
| align = left
| direction = horizontal
| image1 = Richard P. Bland_-_Brady-Handy.jpg
| width1 = 150
| alt1 = A photograph of a man wearing nineteenth-century formal clothing
| caption1 = In 1876, Richard P. Bland introduced a bill in the House to resume coinage of the standard silver dollar.
| image2 = William B. Allison_-_Brady-Handy.jpg
| width2 = 155
| alt2 = A photograph of a man wearing nineteenth-century formal clothing
| caption2 = William B. Allison added amendments to the bill in the Senate
}}

In 1873, Congress enacted the Fourth Coinage Act,{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=21}} which effectively ended the bimetallic standard in the United States by demonetizing silver bullion.{{sfn|Fite|p=428}} Prior to enactment of the Coinage Act, silver could be brought to the mints and coined into legal tender for a small fee.{{sfn|Fite|p=429}} With such a system in place, bullion producers could have silver coined into dollars when the intrinsic value of a silver dollar was lower than the face value, thus making a profit, flooding the money supply and causing inflation.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=23}} The act ended production of the standard silver dollar (then the Seated Liberty dollar, as designed by Christian Gobrecht) and provided for mintage of a silver trade dollar, which was intended to compete with Mexican dollars for use in the Orient.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=23}} Under the act, bullion producers were allowed to bring bullion to the mints in order to be cast into bars or coined into the newly authorized trade dollars for a small fee.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=23}} Trade dollars initially held legal tender status, but it was revoked in 1876 to prevent bullion producers from making a profit by coining silver into trade dollars when the value of the metal was low.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=18}} The restrictions on free coinage laid out in the Coinage Act initially met little resistance from mining interests until the price of silver declined rapidly due to increased mining in the Western United States.{{sfn|Fite|p=428}} Protests also came from bankers, manufacturers and farmers, who felt an increased money supply would have a positive impact. Groups were formed that demanded the free coinage of silver (or "free silver") in order to inflate the dollar following the Panic of 1873.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=24}}

Beginning in 1876, several bills were introduced in the House of Representatives in an effort to resume the free coinage of silver.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=24}} One such bill introduced into the House by Democratic Representative Richard P. Bland of Missouri was passed in the fall of 1876.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=24}} Republican senator William B. Allison of Iowa added important amendments to the bill in the Senate. The House bill allowed Free Silver; one of Allison's amendments struck that provision.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=24}} This same amendment allowed for the issuance of silver certificates for the first time in United States history.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=24}} The bill was vetoed by President Rutherford B. Hayes. The president's veto was overridden on February 28, 1878. What came to be known as the Bland–Allison Act required that the Treasury purchase between two and four million dollars' worth of silver per month, to be coined into silver dollars at the former gold/silver value ratio of 16:1, meaning that one ounce of gold would be valued the same as sixteen ounces of silver.{{sfn|Fite|p=429}}

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Design history

{{multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| image1 = Halfdollarmorgan.JPG
| width1 = 250
| alt1 = A pattern coin depicting a left-facing woman on the obverse and an eagle on the reverse
| caption1 = A pattern half dollar created by George T. Morgan
| image2 = Barberdollar.JPG
| width2 = 250
| alt2 = A silver dollar pattern depicting a left-facing woman on the obverse and an eagle on the reverse
| caption2 = A pattern for the standard silver dollar created by William Barber
}}

In 1876, Director of the Mint Henry Linderman began efforts to redesign the nation's silver coins.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=73}} Linderman contacted C.W. Fremantle, Deputy Master of the Royal Mint in London, requesting him to "find a first class die-sinker who would be willing to take the position of Assistant Engraver at the Mint at Philadelphia."{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=73}} In response to Linderman's request, Fremantle wrote "My inquiries as to an Assistant Engraver lead me very strongly to recommend for the post Mr. George Morgan, age 30, who has made himself a considerable name, but for whom there is not much opening at present in this country."{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=73}} An agreement was reached between Linderman and Morgan for the engraver to work at the Philadelphia Mint under Chief Engraver William Barber on a six-month trial basis.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=73}}

Morgan arrived in Philadelphia on October 9, 1876.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=73}} His earliest pattern coins designed during his tenure at the Philadelphia Mint were intended for the half dollar.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=74}} In 1876, Morgan enrolled as a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts to prepare to create a new Liberty head design.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=75}} Morgan also obtained studies from nature of the bald eagle for preparation of the reverse design.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=75}} For the representation of Liberty, Morgan sought to depict an American woman rather than the usual Greek–style figures.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=75}} Morgan's friend, artist Thomas Eakins, suggested he use Anna Willess Williams of Philadelphia as a model.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=75}} In total, Morgan had five sittings with Williams; he declared her profile to be the most perfect he had seen.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=75}}

On October 18, 1877, Linderman requested Superintendent of the Philadelphia Mint James Pollock to "instruct Mr. Morgan to prepare without delay, dies for a silver dollar, the designs, inscriptions, and arrangement thereof to be the same as the enclosed impression for the Half Dollar and numbered '2' substituting the words 'one dollar' in place of 'half dollar'". Linderman also ordered Pollock to "instruct Mr. Barber to prepare a reverse die for a dollar with a representation of an eagle as well as the inscriptions required by law. He will select whichever of his Heads of Liberty he prefers for the obverse of the same."{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=79}} Linderman evidently preferred the designs of Morgan over those of the Chief Engraver; he wrote Pollock on February 21, 1878, "I have now to state for your information, that it is my intention, in the event of the silver bill now pending in Congress, becoming law, to request the approval by the Secretary of the Treasury, of the dies prepared by Mr. Morgan."{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=83}}

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Production

Production of the coins did not commence until March 11, more than a week after the passage of the Bland–Allison Act.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=84}} The first acceptable strike, after adjustments to the press, was coined at 3:17 p.m. at the Philadelphia Mint.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=84}} This piece was given to President Hayes; the second and third were given to Secretary of the Treasury John Sherman and Mint Director Henry Linderman.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=84}}

Linderman desired to involve the western mints of San Francisco and Carson City in production in order to help reach the monthly quota necessary under the Bland–Allison Act.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=86}} Pressure was so great at the Philadelphia Mint that it halted production of all other coins and began operating overtime.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=88}} Use of the western mints was delayed, however, as all dies were prepared at the Philadelphia Mint, and it was believed that the Western mints did not have the proper equipment to prepare the dies for use.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=87}} During the second week of production, Linderman pointed out what he called a "slight imperfection" in the dies for the dollar.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=87}} The reason for the changes was to reduce the relief of the designs and to change the number of tail feathers on the eagle from eight to seven; this was done because all prior United States coinage depicted the bald eagle as having an odd number of tail feathers.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=87}} The high relief had caused the dies to have a shorter life.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=88}} Dies were eventually sent to the Western mints, arriving in both San Francisco and Carson City on April 16, 1878.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=90}} The New Orleans Mint began striking the new silver dollars in 1879.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=219}}

The Denver Mint, established in 1906, struck the coins for only one year, in 1921.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=221}} The mint marks appearing on the coins are none, representing Philadelphia, "CC" for Carson City, "S" for San Francisco, "O" for New Orleans and "D" for Denver.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=221}} In order to conform to the Coinage Act of 1837, the Morgan dollar contained ninety percent silver and ten percent copper, measured {{convert|38.1|mm|in|}} in diameter and weighed {{convert|412.5|gr|g}}.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=218}}

Sherman Silver Purchase Act, Panic of 1893

{{main article|Sherman Silver Purchase Act|Panic of 1893}}

Mintage of the Morgan dollar remained relatively steady until the passage of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act on July 14, 1890.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=220}} The act, authored by Ohio senator and former Treasury secretary John Sherman, forced the Treasury to increase the amount of silver purchased to {{convert|4500000|ozt|kg}} each month.{{sfn|Fite|p=446}} Supporters of the act believed that an increase in the amount of silver purchased would result in inflation, helping to relieve the nation's farmers.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=27}} The act also received support from mining interests because such large purchases would cause the price of silver to rise and increase their profits.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=27}} Despite the Act's requiring large purchases of silver indefinitely, it provided that the Mint must coin 2,000,000 silver dollars each month only until 1891.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=29}} Since the Treasury already had a surplus of silver dollars, minting of dollars dropped sharply beginning in 1892.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=220}} The silver that remained after mintage of the dollars was used to mint dimes, quarters and half dollars.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=220}}

Beginning early in 1893, a number of industrial firms, including the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad and the National Cordage Company went bankrupt.[3] The resulting bank runs and failures became known as the Panic of 1893.[3] In June of that year, President Grover Cleveland, who believed that the Panic was caused by the inflation generated by the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, called a special session of Congress in order to repeal it.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=29}} The act was repealed on November 1, 1893.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=29}} On June 13, 1898, Congress ordered the coining of all the remaining bullion purchased under the Sherman Silver Purchase Act into silver dollars.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=29}} Silver dollar production rose again,{{sfn|Yeoman|p=221}} until the bullion was exhausted in 1904, when it ceased.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=30}}

Pittman Act

{{main article|Pittman Act}}

The German government began a propaganda campaign during World War I to discredit the United Kingdom's currency in India.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=30}} The Germans convinced Indian citizens that British banknotes in that country could not be redeemed for silver. This led to a run on the British supply of silver.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=30}} In response, United States Democratic senator Key Pittman of Nevada introduced legislation in 1918 that was intended to offer financial relief to the British government.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}} The bill, passed on April 22, 1918, stated that "sales of silver bullion under authority of this act may be made for the purpose of conserving the existing stock of gold in the United States, of providing silver for subsidiary coinage and for commercial use, and of assisting foreign governments at war with the enemies of the United States".{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}} The Pittman Act authorized the U.S. to melt up to 350,000,000 silver dollars,{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}} and this commenced immediately after the Act's passage.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}} The U.S. eventually melted a total of 270,232,722 silver dollars.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}} Of that amount, 259,121,554  were sold to the United Kingdom at the cost of one dollar per troy ounce.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=31}}

The U.S. only minted the Morgan dollar again during 1921,{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=32}} the only year in which Morgan dollars were struck at the Denver mint. Since the Treasury had destroyed the obsolete Morgan dollar dies in 1910, Morgan had to create an entirely new master die.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=95}} Another provision of the Pittman Act authorized the U.S. to mint a replacement coin for every silver dollar melted.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=32}} During the same year, the Peace dollar was first issued to commemorate the end of World War I.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=222}} The Peace dollar was supposedly minted to replace the Morgan dollar under the terms of the Pittman Act but without congressional authorization, despite the fact that the Act did not describe the coin design.{{sfn|Yeoman|p=222}} The change in design was actually authorized under an 1890 act of Congress,{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|p=409}} which stated:

{{quote | But no change in the design or die of any coin shall be made oftener than once in twenty-five years from and including the year of the first adoption of the design, model, die, or hub for the same coin:

Provided, That no change be made in the diameter of any coin:

And provided further, That nothing in this section shall prevent the adoption of new designs or models for devices or emblems already authorized for the standard silver dollar and the five-cent nickel piece as soon as practicable after the passage of this act.[5] }}

Carson City Mint Morgan dollars

Until 1964, U.S. citizens could redeem paper money known as silver certificates for silver dollars at a U.S. Treasury mint on demand. In 1962, an individual redeemed a silver certificate and received a rare and valuable Morgan dollar in exchange. The coin was from a bag of silver dollars in the vault of the Philadelphia Mint.{{sfn|Yeoman|pp=27–28}}[1] This incident triggered huge interest, and between November 1962 and March 1964, millions of Morgan and Peace dollars were sold to the general public.{{sfn|Yeoman|pp=27–28}} The demand to exchange silver certificates for silver dollars was so great that lines formed outside of the Treasury Building in Washington, D.C. Some people in line were pushing wheelbarrows.{{sfn|Yeoman|pp=27–28}} The U.S. Treasury discovered previously unknown mint bags of Carson City dollars in its vaults containing slightly more than 2.8 million Carson City silver dollars in the Treasury vaults.[1] Treasury officials decided to hold them back because the total number of coins minted at the Carson City mint were generally lower than others.{{sfn|Yeoman|pp=27–28}}

On May 12, 1969, the Joint Commission on Coinage held a meeting in order to determine the best way to sell the Carson City-minted dollars earlier held back by Treasury officials. They recommended a mail bid sale.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}} Legislation was passed on December 31, 1970 directing the Treasury to transfer the silver dollars to the Administrator of General Services who was given the responsibility for marketing and selling the coins.[8] The legislation also stated that all proceeds from the sale were to be "covered into the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts."[8] Congress supplied the General Services Administration with $10 million to market the dollar coins.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}} Advertising consisted of posters and brochures distributed to post offices, banks and various financial institutions, as well as television documentaries.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}} The coins were sorted and mounted in small plastic display cases.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}} The GSA conducted a total of seven mail bid sales between 1972 and 1980.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}} In total, the sales generated $107 million in revenue.{{sfn|Van Allen & Mallis|pp=397–402}}

San Francisco commemorative dollar

On June 15, 2006, legislation was approved that provided for the minting of a silver dollar and a five dollar gold coin in "commemoration of the Old Mint at San Francisco," with surcharges to be given to the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society in an effort to rehabilitate the Old Mint.[10] In total, 100,000 gold and 500,000 silver commemorative coins were authorized.[10] Authorization came at the behest of several hobby publications, who enlisted readers to contact their local congressmen and persuade them to pass necessary legislation.{{sfn|Julian|p=265}} The designs approved for the silver dollar bear a left-frontal view of the Old Mint building and a copy of Morgan's eagle design on the obverse and reverse, respectively.{{sfn|Julian|p=263}} Mint artist Joseph Menna made a new model for the reverse, employing a 1904 San Francisco-minted dollar as his model.[12]

Mintage figures

The dollars were produced every year between 1878 and 1904 at a total of 4 different mints. Each mint, with the exception of Philadelphia, has its own mint mark. In 1921 production was resumed for one year only, with this year being the only one where the Denver mint was used.[2]

YearPhiladelphiaNew OrleansSan FranciscoCarson CityDenver
1878 10,500,000 9,774,000 2,212,000
1879 14,806,000 2,887,000 9,110,000 756,000
1880 12,600,000 5,305,000 8,900,000 591,000
1881 9,162,991 5,708,000 12,760,000 296,000
1882 11,100,000 6,090,000 9,250,000 1,133,000
1883 12,290,000 8,725,000 6,250,000 1,204,000
1884 14,070,000 9,730,000 3,200,000 1,136,000
1885 17,787,000 9,185,000 1,497,000 228,000
1886 19,963,000 10,710,000 750,000
1887 20,290,000 11,550,000 1,771,000
1888 19,183,000 12,150,000 657,000
1889 21,726,000 11,875,000 700,000 350,000
1890 16,802,000 10,701,100 8,230,373 2,309,041
1891 8,693,556 7,954,529 5,296,000 1,618,000
1892 1,036,000 2,744,000 1,200,000 1,352,000
1893 378,000 300,000 100,000 677,000
1894 110,000 1,723,000 1,260,000
1895 880 450,000 400,000
1896 9,976,000 4,900,000 5,000,000
1897 2,822,000 4,004,000 5,825,000
1898 5,884,000 4,400,000 4,102,000
1899 330,000 12,290,000 2,562,000
1900 8,830,000 12,590,000 3,540,000
1901 6,962,000 13,320,000 2,284,000
1902 7,994,000 8,636,000 1,530,000
1903 4,652,000 4,450,000 1,241,000
1904 2,788,000 3,720,000 2,304,000
1921 44,690,000 21,695,000 20,345,000
Total 305,437,547 186,097,629 131,188,373 13,862,041 20,345,000
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References

1. ^{{cite web|title=United States Mint Branch at Carson City, Nevada|url=http://www.gainesvillecoins.com/carson-city.aspx|accessdate=4 September 2014}}
2. ^{{cite web|author=Ron Guth |url=http://www.coinfacts.com/silver_dollars/morgan_dollars/morgan_silver_dollars.html |title=Morgan Silver Dollars |publisher=Coinfacts.com |date= |accessdate=2017-10-30}}
3. ^{{cite journal| last1 = Brothers| first1 = Eric|date=January 2011| title = The Great Panic of 1893 and its Aftermath| journal = The Numismatist| pages = 48–52}}
4. ^{{cite book| editor-last = Richardson| editor-first = William Allen| year = 1891| title = Supplement to the revised statutes of the United States| volume = 1| pages = 806–807| publisher = United States Government Printing Office| location = Washington, D.C.| url = https://books.google.com/?id=Dcg4AAAAIAAJ&dq=act+of+september+26,+1890}} 26 Stat L. 484, amendment to R.S. §3510
5. ^{{cite book| author = Department of the Treasury, Bureau of the Mint| year = 1972| pages = 137–138| title = Domestic and Foreign Coins Manufactured by Mints of the United States 1793–1970| publisher = United States Government Printing Office| location = Washington, D.C.}}
6. ^{{cite web| author = 109th Congress| date = June 15, 2006| title = San Francisco Old Mint Commemorative Coin Act, Pub. L. no. 109-230, 120 Stat 391| publisher = US Govt. Printing Office| url = http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=109_cong_public_laws&docid=f:publ230.109.pdf| format = PDF| accessdate = August 28, 2012}}
7. ^{{cite web| title = San Francisco Old Mint Commemorative Coin Program| publisher = United States Mint| url = http://www.usmint.gov/mint_programs/commemoratives/index.cfm?action=oldsfmint| accessdate = February 13, 2011}}
[3][4][5][6][7]
}}

Bibliography

{{refbegin}}
  • {{cite book

| last = Fite
| first = Emerson David
| year = 1919
| title = History of the United States
| edition = second
| publisher = Henry Holt & Co
| location = New York City
| ref = {{sfnRef|Fite}}
  • {{cite book

| last = Julian
| first = R.W.
| editor-last = Bowers
| editor-first = Q. David
| editorlink = Q. David Bowers
| year = 1993
| title = Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States
| publisher = Bowers and Merena Galleries
| location = Wolfeboro, New Hampshire
| isbn = 0-943161-48-7
| ref = {{sfnRef|Julian}}
  • {{cite book

| last1 = Van Allen
| first1 = Leroy C.
| last2 = Mallis
| first2 = A. George
| year = 1991
| title = Comprehensive Catalog and Encyclopedia of Morgan & Peace Dollars
| publisher = DLRC Press
| location = Virginia Beach, Virginia
| isbn = 978-1-880731-11-6
| ref = {{sfnRef|Van Allen & Mallis}}
  • {{cite book

| last = Yeoman
| first = R. S.
| authorlink = Richard S. Yeoman
| year = 2010
| title = A Guide Book of United States Coins
| edition = 63rd
| publisher = Whitman Publishing
| location = Atlanta, Georgia
| isbn = 978-0-7948-2767-0
| ref = {{sfnRef|Yeoman}}{{refend}}

External links

{{Portal|Money|Numismatics}}{{Commons category|Morgan dollar}}
  • The National Silver Dollar Round Table
{{s-start}}{{succession box
| title = Dollar coin of the United States (1878–1904, 1921)
{{nobold|Concurrent with:}}
Trade dollar (1878–1885)
Large Head Indian Gold dollar – Type III (1878–1889)
Peace dollar (1921)
| before = Seated Liberty dollar
| after = Peace dollar
| years =
}}{{s-end}}{{US currency and coinage}}{{Coinage (United States)}}{{Featured article}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Morgan Dollar}}

6 : 1878 introductions|Goddess of Liberty on coins|Silver coins|United States dollar coins|United States silver coins|Birds on coins

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