1855 $1 (Regular Strike)

Series: Liberty Seated Dollars 1840-1873

PCGS MS64+

PCGS MS64+

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PCGS MS63

PCGS MS63

PCGS MS62

PCGS MS62

PCGS #:
6943
Designer:
Christian Gobrecht
Edge:
Reeded
Diameter:
38.10 millimeters
Weight:
26.73 grams
Mintage:
26,000
Mint:
Philadelphia
Metal:
90% Silver, 10% Copper
Major Varieties

Current Auctions - PCGS Graded
Current Auctions - NGC Graded
For Sale Now at Collectors Corner - PCGS Graded
For Sale Now at Collectors Corner - NGC Graded

Rarity and Survival Estimates Learn More

Grades Survival
Estimate
Numismatic
Rarity
Relative Rarity
By Type
Relative Rarity
By Series
All Grades 950 R-5.1 4 / 30 10 / 45
60 or Better 32 R-8.8 4 / 30 TIE 10 / 45 TIE
65 or Better 0 R-10.1 1 / 30 1 / 45
Survival Estimate
All Grades 950
60 or Better 32
65 or Better
Numismatic Rarity
All Grades R-5.1
60 or Better R-8.8
65 or Better R-10.1
Relative Rarity By Type All Specs in this Type
All Grades 4 / 30
60 or Better 4 / 30 TIE
65 or Better 1 / 30
Relative Rarity By Series All Specs in this Series
All Grades 10 / 45
60 or Better 10 / 45 TIE
65 or Better 1 / 45

Condition Census What Is This?

Pos Grade Image Pedigree and History
1 PCGS MS64+  
	MS64+ PCGS grade

Bob R. Simpson; The Legend Collection; Bruce Morelan; Bruce Morelan Liberty Seated Dollar Collection sold en bloc to Dell Loy Hansen, ; Dell Loy Hansen; "The D.L. Hansen Seated Dollars Complete Set (1836-1873)" (PCGS Set Registry). Reddish orange, green and blue target toning on the obverse. Amber toning on the reverse with red and blue along the periphery.

2 PCGS MS64

“Auction ’80,” Paramount, August 1980, Lot 806; Stack’s, October 1985, Lot 225; As NGC MS64 #3122719-007. “The Queller Family Collection of Silver Dollars,” Heritage Auctions, April 17, 2008, Lot 2112 – $149,500; Bill Nagle. As PCGS MS64 CAC #06895788. "The Eugene H. Gardner Collection," Heritage Auctions, June 23 2014, Lot 30598 – $141,000; "The American Girls Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Gold centers with amber toning along the periphery. 

3 PCGS MS63  
	PCGS #6943 (MS) 63

Peach and yellow toning. Small tick on Liberty's thigh. Rim contact mark below and to the left of Star 13.

3 PCGS MS63

"The M & S Petty Collection," Legend Rare Coin Auctions, July 28, 2022, Lot 243 - $36,425"The Aknillow Silver Dollars Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Peach and pale color. Pin-sized toning spot below the base, below Liberty's feet.

3 PCGS MS63

"The Arkansas Collection" (PCGS Set Registry).

3 PCGS MS63
3 PCGS MS63
 
	MS64+ PCGS grade 
#1 PCGS MS64+

Bob R. Simpson; The Legend Collection; Bruce Morelan; Bruce Morelan Liberty Seated Dollar Collection sold en bloc to Dell Loy Hansen, ; Dell Loy Hansen; "The D.L. Hansen Seated Dollars Complete Set (1836-1873)" (PCGS Set Registry). Reddish orange, green and blue target toning on the obverse. Amber toning on the reverse with red and blue along the periphery.

#2 PCGS MS64

“Auction ’80,” Paramount, August 1980, Lot 806; Stack’s, October 1985, Lot 225; As NGC MS64 #3122719-007. “The Queller Family Collection of Silver Dollars,” Heritage Auctions, April 17, 2008, Lot 2112 – $149,500; Bill Nagle. As PCGS MS64 CAC #06895788. "The Eugene H. Gardner Collection," Heritage Auctions, June 23 2014, Lot 30598 – $141,000; "The American Girls Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Gold centers with amber toning along the periphery. 

 
	PCGS #6943 (MS) 63 
#3 PCGS MS63

Peach and yellow toning. Small tick on Liberty's thigh. Rim contact mark below and to the left of Star 13.

#3 PCGS MS63

"The M & S Petty Collection," Legend Rare Coin Auctions, July 28, 2022, Lot 243 - $36,425"The Aknillow Silver Dollars Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Peach and pale color. Pin-sized toning spot below the base, below Liberty's feet.

#3 PCGS MS63

"The Arkansas Collection" (PCGS Set Registry).

#3 PCGS MS63
#3 PCGS MS63
Charles Morgan:

The 1855 Liberty Seated Dollar

The Philadelphia Mint utilized a single die pair to strike the entire 26,000-coin mintage of the 1855 Liberty Seated Dollar (#6943). Production began on May 4 and concluded on June 25, with the total mintage completed over just four calendar days.

1855 Liberty Seated Dollar Production

May 4, 1855 9,000 struck May 10, 1855 3,000 struck
May 15, 1855 4,000 struck June 25, 1855 10,000 struck
Total Mintage: 26,000 coins

The production disparity between denominations in 1855 was typical for the decade. While the 1855 Gold Dollar (#7532) and the reduced-weight 1855 Liberty Seated Half Dollar (#6281) were struck in large quantities, the silver dollar was not a mainstay of domestic commerce. However, there is a wrinkle with this particular issue: whereas in most years, the deonomination was struck primarily as bullion for export to Asia or South America, the 1855 Liberty Seated Dollar was largely struck for domestic circulation in California.

Consequently, while the Philadelphia-minted 1855 Half Dollars and Gold Dollars are plentiful and affordable today, very few 1855 Silver Dollars survive—and none are known in PCGS MS65 condition. With so many condition rarities, the Liberty Seated Dollar might just be the most 'slept-on' coin in the entire U.S. federal series.

Survival and Population

While some estimates place the total number of 1855 Liberty Seated Dollar survivors at nearly 1,000 specimens, the PCGS Population Report suggests a much more restrictive reality. In 40 years of grading, the census for PCGS-certified examples remains well below 150.

A steady trickle of these coins arrive at our grading offices each year, but many exhibit issues that preclude them from receiving a numeric grade. Given that the ratio of "No Grade" submissions sharply outweighs successful certifications, it is unlikely that a sizable reservoir of untapped, high-quality examples exists. While an occasional "fresh" piece may emerge from a long-held estate, the 1855 silver dollar will remains fundamentally scarce in Mint State—and exceptionally rare when coupled with strong eye appeal.

Head-to-Head: 1854 vs. 1855

Silver dollar experts Jim Osburn and Brian Cushing estimate that only about 300 specimens survive across all grades today. The traditional view is that the 1855 is similar in rarity to the 1854 (#6942), but that the 1854 generally offers coins with superior eye appeal. Neither date is known to exist in Gem Mint State (PCGS MS65 or higher), but the 1854 boasts a noticeably higher survival rate at the PCGS MS63 level and above. If you read between the lines in my write up for the 1854, you will see that that the traditional view is wrong. There aren't more 1854s at MS63 and above, there are just more active certs. We can't know for sure by how many coins the census overreports, but at least three of PCGS MS63 and above examples we've certified have not been seen in the market since the 1990s.

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