| Survival Estimate | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 150 |
| 60 or Better | 150 |
| 65 or Better | 100 |
| Numismatic Rarity | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | R-7.5 |
| 60 or Better | R-7.5 |
| 65 or Better | R-8.0 |
| Relative Rarity By Type All Specs in this Type | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 6 / 26 |
| 60 or Better | 6 / 26 |
| 65 or Better | 6 / 26 |
| Relative Rarity By Series All Specs in this Series | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 6 / 26 |
| 60 or Better | 6 / 26 |
| 65 or Better | 6 / 26 |
#1 PCGS PR68+RD
As PCGS PR68RD #9925149. "Stewart Blay's Red Copper Collection of Lincoln Cents," GreatCollections, August 28, 2022, Lot 1204599 - $126,562.50; "The Lincoln Collection of Lincoln Cents," GreatCollections, May 9, 2025, Lot 1745226 - $115,312.50. As PCGS PR68+RD #56207019. "The Jeremy Bolt - 1st Love Proof (1909-1958) Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). |
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#1 PCGS PR68RD
"The Wright Collection," Heritage Auctions, August 10, 2016, Lot 3974 - $39,950. At the time of the sale, the Wright Collcetion was the #3 Finest All-Time PCGS Set Registry set of Matte Proof Lincoln Cents. |
#3 PCGS PR67+RD
"The JBolt_TPA Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). |
#3 PCGS PR67+RD
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| #5 PCGS PR67RD |
#5 PCGS PR67RD
GreatCollections, February 25, 2024, Lot 1334578 - $11,926.25. |
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#5 PCGS PR67RD
Heritage Auctions, October 7, 2021, Lot 3476 - $19,200. |
#5 PCGS PR67RD
Heritage Auctions, February 22, 2018, Lot 3744 - $12,000. |
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#5 PCGS PR67RD
Heritage Auctions, February 18, 2012, Lot 5040 - $17,825; "The Brenner's Masterpieces Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). |
#5 PCGS PR67RD
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#5 PCGS PR67RD
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#5 PCGS PR67RD
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The 1914 Lincoln cent Matte Proof (PCGS BN #3318) was struck periodically throughout the year, with monthly emissions reported in January, April, July, October, November, and December. The Mint's quality control was relatively strong across most of the year, with the notable exceptions of the April and October production runs. This monthly delivery schedule closely mirrored the production cycle of the 1914 Matte Proof Buffalo nickels, though the first delivery of those nickels did not take place until February 7.
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1914 Lincoln Cent Matte Proof Deliveries |
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| Date | Struck | Accepted | % Accepted |
| January 30 | 400 | 380 | 95% |
| April 7 | 350 | 250 | 71.4% |
| July 30 | 200 | 185 | 92.5% |
| October 8 | 148 | 100 | 67.6% |
| November 19 | 250 | 200 | 80% |
| December 23 | 300 | 250 | 83.3% |
| Total | 1,648 | 1,365 | 82.8% |
One die pair was used to strike the entire mintage. The obverse die is observed in two distinct states: in the early die state, the die is perfect, but in the later state, a patch of crisscrossing scratches appears below the chin and date.
The reverse die is the same one used to strike all Lincoln Cent Matte Proofs since 1910; the 1914 issue marked the final deployment of this die. A scratch at the bottom of the "M" in UNUM can be seen on all 1910–1914 Proofs.
The 1914 is one of only a handful of Lincoln Matte Proof issues that can be acquired in elite gem condition, with the finest known examples standing as monumental conditional rarities. While all Lincoln Matte Proofs are scarce to rare compared to modern issues, within the context of the series, the 1914, along with the 1910 (BN #3306) ranks among the more available dates. The Mint struck 1,365 examples of the 1914, and while a significant portion of the mintage has since been graded by PCGS, the vast majority of survivors possess the Red Brown or Brown designations, leaving fully Red examples exceedingly rare.
Despite their low mintages, the 1914 and its fellow Matte Proof counterparts remain an enigma to most collectors. Although the Lincoln Cent is one of the most popularly collected U.S. coin types, the brief production run of Matte Proofs, their textured matte finish, and high prices have kept the series from capturing the widespread cultural cachet enjoyed by business-strike keys like the 1909-S V.D.B. and the 1914-D. While advanced specialists appreciate their true scarcity, this historically significant subset richly deserves broader recognition from the wider collecting community.
William Pukall, a pioneering mail-order coin dealer based in Union City, New Jersey, began ordering roll quantities of uncirculated and Proof coins directly from the Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco Mints starting in 1914. Decades later, in the mid-1950s, an aging Pukall became a major inventory supplier for a young Q. David Bowers, selling him hundreds of pristine Matte Proof Lincoln cents still wrapped in their original Mint tissue paper. Remarkably, Pukall’s early hoarding habits also included entire roll quantities of the ultra-key 1916 Standing Liberty Quarter (Base #5704). Because Pukall bypassed contemporary distributors to secure his massive holdings directly from the U.S. Mint, his stock provided the market with some of the finest-known early 20th-century minor coins and proofs.
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