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20 Dollars, United States, 1927

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    mint

    U.S. Mint, Denver

    designer

    Saint-Gaudens, Augustus

    Description (Brief)

    One (1) 20 dollar coin
    United States, 1927
    Obverse Image: Full-length Liberty holding a torch in her right hand and olive branch in left. Capitol Dome in lower left; rays of sun in background; stars around rim.
    Obverse Text: LIBERTY / 1927 / D
    Reverse Image: Eagle flying with sun behind.
    Reverse Text: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA / TWENTY DOLLARS / IN GOD WE TRUST
    Edge: E PLURIBUS UNUM divided by stars.

    Description

    Numismatic legends can be contrived, or they can be accidental-objects that never started as legends but became legendary due to unforeseen circumstances. Perhaps all but a few members of a given mintage were destroyed, or hoarded in unsettled times and never recovered. Under these circumstances, legendary status will be acquired years after the actual creation of the object.
    America's numismatic story embraces a number of accidental legends, but none, perhaps, is more fascinating than a double eagle, struck in Denver in 1927. When the 1927 Denver twenty-dollar gold piece was minted, there was absolutely nothing exceptional about the coin, or the circumstances of its creation.
    The United States was firmly on the gold standard. Gold was still being mined in Alaska and the West, and the United States branch mints at Denver and San Francisco were expected to turn the yellow metal into gold coins, which they did. That year saw Denver producing 180,000 double eagles-a decline from the figure for previous years, but a perfectly acceptable mintage.
    If matters had remained as they were when the coins were struck, they never would have become legendary. But matters did not remain the same. An economic downturn at the end of the 1920s turned into an economic collapse by the beginning of the 1930s; and a new President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, decided to take the country off the gold standard as one more way of combating the Depression.
    Under the circumstances, most gold coins were called in and melted. Provisions were made for exempting collectibles, but few people thought of the recent gold issues as collectibles. So virtually all were turned in, the 1927 Denver double eagles along with the rest. And a once reasonably common twenty-dollar coin from Denver acquired legendary status. At present, this is one of fewer than a dozen that are known.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    date made

    1927

    ID Number

    1984.1046.0812

    catalog number

    1984.1046.0812

    accession number

    1984.1046

    Object Name

    coin

    Physical Description

    gold (overall metal)
    0 (overall die axis)
    0 (overall die axis measurement)
    struck (overall production method)

    Measurements

    overall: 3.35 cm; 1 5/16 in

    place of issue

    United States

    Related Publication

    Zoomable Image and Details
    Glossary of Coins and Currency Terms

    Related Web Publication

    http://americanhistory.si.edu/coins/glossary.cfm

    See more items in

    Work and Industry: National Numismatic Collection
    Coins
    Numismatics
    Coins, Currency and Medals
    Legendary Coins

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a9-5a88-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1090018

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