1908-S $5 AU58 Certification #43065932, PCGS #8512
Expert Comments
Charles Morgan
The 1908-S Indian Half Eagle
Bela Lyon Pratt's incuse Indian Half Eagle debuted in 1908. For the United States Mint, it was a design first; no coin that came before it had featured a sunken relief. Pratt's Native American figure was regal, weathered, and realistic. This shift to realism was a dramatic departure from Augustus Saint-Gaudens’ iconic Double Eagle and $10 Indian designs. The latter expressed the allegorical forms of Liberty drawn from French Neoclassicism and the Beaux-Arts school, of which the Cornish, New Hampshire sculptor was a master.
Pratt's figure veered toward photorealism, presaging Victor David Brenner's 1909 portrait of Abraham Lincoln on the cent and James Earle Fraser's magnificent Buffalo Nickel of 1913. Stylistic consistency was not a fundamental building block of America's "golden age" of coin design, however, as allegory returned in the three silver coin designs of 1916. When the era of American circulating gold coins came to a close in 1933, a permanent shift began toward a modern style of coinage where politicians became the symbols of the state. For the allegorical Liberty, the Great Depression and World War II saw Americans look more toward their living leaders than Enlightenment ideals.
Collecting the 1908-S Indian Half Eagle
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1908 Indian Half Eagle Production |
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| Philadelphia (#8510) | Denver (#8511) | San Francisco (#8512) |
| 577,845 | 148,000 | 82,000 |
| Scarce at MS65 and above | Rare at MS65 | Scarce at MS64 and above |
In 1908, the Indian Half Eagle was struck at three mints. The 1908-S remains the toughest of the three issues by a wide margin until you reach the PCGS MS65 grade level, where the 1908-D becomes the true rarity, seldom encountered in Gem condition. A small number of truly exceptional 1908-S Half Eagles survive, with several tracing back to the famous Virgil Brand hoard. The finest example has a rumored connection to Brand and later to gold coin dealer par excellence David W. Akers, who reportedly kept it in his personal collection. This remarkable specimen has since passed through the collections of Jim O'Neal and Texas Rangers owner Bob Simpson, and it is presently held in a private collection.
Rarity and Survival Estimates Learn More
| 65 or Better | 1666 |
| All Grades | 716 |
| 60 or Better | 140 |
| 65 or Better | R-4.7 |
| All Grades | R-5.5 |
| 60 or Better | R-7.6 |
| 65 or Better | 3 / 24 |
| All Grades | 9 / 24 |
| 60 or Better | 19 / 24 TIE |
| 65 or Better | 3 / 24 |
| All Grades | 9 / 24 |
| 60 or Better | 19 / 24 TIE |
Condition Census Learn More
#1 PCGS MS68
(possibly) Virgil Brand; (possibly) David W. Akers; Heritage Auctions, July 2005, Lot 10366 - Passed. As PCGS MS68 #18307662. "The Jim O'Neal Collection," Heritage Auctions, January 2011, Lot 5135 - $126,500; Heritage Auctions, August 3, 2023, Lot 5373 - $164,500; Bob R. Simpson. As PCGS MS68 #40323810. "The Bob R. Simpson Collection," Heritage Auctions, September 17, 2020, Lot 10145 - $192,000.
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#2 PCGS MS67
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#2 PCGS MS67
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#2 PCGS MS67
Bob R. Simpson. |
#2 PCGS MS67
Mike Chipman. |





