#1 PCGS SP64BMCA
Roy Roach, April 1975 (cherrypicked as a Mint State Prooflike specimen); unknown intermediaries. As PCGS SP64BMCA #50052363. "The Thomas H. Sebring Collection," American Numismatic Rarities, January 2004, Lot 1403 - $103,500; "The Black Cat Twenty Cents with Branch Mint Proof (1875-1878) Collection" (PCGS Set Registry). Curved lintmark to the upper left of star 8. |
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#1 PCGS SP63BMCA
"The Driftwood Twenty Cent Complete Set" (PCGS Set Registry). |
The 1875-S Proof Liberty Seated Twenty-Cent Piece (#5307, BMCA #85307) is one of the more mysterious issues ever produced by the San Francisco Mint. Classified as a "Branch Mint Proof," records suggest that 12 specimens were struck, yet only six have been confirmed to exist today and two of these were not even attributed as Proofs until after 1975.
In the 1970s, numismatic writer Don Taxay speculated that these coins were likely the very first Twenty-Cent Pieces struck at San Francisco, produced between June 1 and June 3, 1875, to commemorate the start of the new denomination’s production.
Unlike standard business strikes, the Branch Mint Proof 1875-S Twenty-Cent Pieces exhibit specific characteristics first detailed by R.B. White in the March 1974 issue of The Numismatist.
Key diagnostics include:
While numismatist Walter Breen corroborated these findings, he noted a complicating factor: the dies used for these Proofs were later retained and utilized for regular business-strike production. This makes the "Proof" status dependent on the quality of the strike and the state of the surfaces, rather than the die variety alone.
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