Author

Topic: Gold coin .242 oz - San Francisco Old Mint (Read 319 times)

legendary
Activity: 1638
Merit: 1010
https://www.bitcoin.com/
March 25, 2017, 03:38:08 AM
#2
Nice looking coin, has this coin been graded yet, if so what grade does it have?

Have you had any trouble selling gold coins online before? Not saying you are selling a fake but personally i just couldn't trust buying online with so many fakes of everything around these days.

I sold a 1oz gold bar from the Perth mint online once but it was not easy because everyone kept saying that it was most likely fake, i knew it wasn't because i bought it from the mint in Perth on a visit once but that doesn't prove anything online.
legendary
Activity: 1025
Merit: 1000
Price: $300

PM me to buy, we shall use escrow.

(Item history:) http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_sacat=0&_nkw=2006%20san%20francisco%20gold&LH_Complete=1&LH_Sold=1&rt=nc&_trksid=p2045573.m1684

Designer: Charles Vickers after A.B. Mullet (obverse), Joseph Menna after Christian Gobrecht (reverse)
Weight: 8.3590 g
Composition: 90% gold (0.242 ounces of gold)
Diameter: 21.6 mm
Maximum Authorized Mintage: 100,000

The 2006 San Francisco Old Mint $5 Gold Coin was issued to mark 100 years after the building survived the 1906 earthquake and fire. As the only financial institution to survive the tragedy, the Old Mint Building played an important role in rebuilding San Francisco as the treasury for disaster relief funds.
The obverse of the gold coin portrays the portico of the San Francisco Mint, based on an 1869 construction drawing by Supervising Architect A.B. Mullet. The inscriptions read “Liberty”, “1906”, “2006”, “E Pluribus Unum”, and “San Francisco Earthquake and Fire Centennial.” The reverse of the coin is based on Christian Gobrecht’s 1906 Coronet Liberty Half Eagle reverse. Inscriptions read “United States of America” and “Five D.” A ribbon above the eagle includes the motto “In God We Trust”.

Sales of the San Francisco Old Mint Gold Coins began at the United States Mint on August 15, 2006. Both the proof and uncirculated versions were produced at the San Francisco Mint and carry the “S” mint mark. This represented the first commemorative gold coin minted in San Francisco since the 1984 Olympic $10 Gold Coins.

For the first two months of sales, the coins were available at pre-issue discount pricing, after which regular pricing went into effect. Surcharges added to the cost of each coin were payable to the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society for the rehabilitation of the Old Mint as a city museum and coin and gold rush museum.
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